Bernie,
All that talk of soundscape recording made me homesick for the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge. So I've posted another recording from our
trip in 2006 at the iTunes Store or at:
http://tinyurl.com/3dybe5r
Also, I agree with the points made in your Science Friday interview
about how well sound checks the ecological pulse of an area, including
night sounds. I've recorded in some of our National Wildlife Refuges
(where refuge biologists do weekly surveys to census all species
present) and frequently find species that the refuge workers didn't
know were on their refuge. Few biologists, let alone anyone else, are
out there at night nor know what they are hearing if they are out.
Last week I recorded at the Rio Mesa preserve in eastern Utah, owned
by the University of Utah. I found (and recorded) a breeding colony
of Woodhouse's Toads they didn't know they had.
Again, thank you for opening my ears to the Soundscapes concept.
Kevin J Colver
Soundscapes for Birders - a Podcast of Natural Sounds
www.7Loons.com
On Apr 28, 2011, at 1:59 PM, Bernie Krause wrote:
> Thanks, Kevin. It has been great fun working with those folks at
> Purdue. Took four years of really hard work to finally get this stuff
> peer reviewed and published. The grad students there and at Michigan
> State did some wonderful work. They deserve lots of credit for how
> they've managed to frame it.
>
> There's another paper coming out, and which we also wrote, on a
> different aspect of the subject in "Landscape Ecology," momentarily.
> It's really a hot topic in eco-circles these days because when
> recorded with proper protocol in the field and then analyzed, the
> natural soundscape sheds so much non-invasive light on the health of
> habitats and how human intervention affects the proto-orchestration,
> that it's becoming the new evaluation tool of choice. And you and
> Martyn have played important roles in this, too. I'll never forget
> some insightful fellow at a NPS meeting, soon after I introduced the
> concept of biophony, opining to the group that I couldn't introduce a
> new word to science. I won't repeat my response in this forum. It's no
> accident that the perseverance paid off.
>
> Anyway, the great universal chirp lives on and every living community
> benefits. What better goal is that?
>
> Bernie
>
> On Apr 28, 2011, at 12:17 PM, Kevin Colver wrote:
>
> > Great interview.
> >
> > Kevin J Colver
> > Soundscapes for Birders - a Podcast of Natural Sounds
> > www.7Loons.com
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > On Apr 22, 2011, at 8:35 AM, Bernie Krause wrote:
> >
> >> For those interested in learning more about soundscape ecology,
> tune
> >> into NPR Science Friday, 3 - 3:30 EDT. Here's the notice:
> >>
> >> http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201104223
> >>
> >> Bernie Krause
> >>
> >> Wild Sanctuary
> >> POB 536
> >> Glen Ellen, CA 95442
> >> 707-996-6677
> >> http://www.wildsanctuary.com
> >>
> >> Google Earth zooms: http://earth.wildsanctuary.com
> >> SKYPE: biophony
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------
> >
> > "While a picture is worth a thousand words, a
> > sound is worth a thousand pictures." R. Murray Schafer via Bernie
> > Krause.
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
> Wild Sanctuary
> POB 536
> Glen Ellen, CA 95442
> 707-996-6677
> http://www.wildsanctuary.com
>
> Google Earth zooms: http://earth.wildsanctuary.com
> SKYPE: biophony
>
>
>
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