产品展示
  • D类2000w车载大功率纯重低音可推双12寸10寸无源双音圈低音炮功放
  • 升级版途乐Y62刹车开关加强型涂乐驻车灯制动开关改装专用配件
  • 汽车电瓶充电器12V24V通用型纯铜大功率修复智能充满自动停充电机
  • 江淮瑞风s3汽车用品专用装饰改装配件中控仪表台避光垫隔热防晒垫
  • 适用本田八/九/十代思域引擎盖液压杆改装思铭奥德赛艾力绅支撑杆
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

How wild bioacoustics recorded in rainforests help conservationists

2024-05-18 21:57:21      点击:566

The deep rainforest is a symphony.

In the rainforests of Indonesia, New Guinea, and other wild lands, scientists strapped microphones to trees and recorded the boisterous howls, grumbles, and shrieks that echo through the woods. It's called bioacoustics, and in a new paper published Thursday in the journal Science, researchers highlighted the value of using recorded wild sound -- which you can hear below -- to gauge how animals are doing in both vulnerable and protected forests.

Modern satellite images certainly give detailed images of the forest canopies, and have proven valuable in grasping the health of rainforests. But they don't tell you what's happening to the creatures underneath the thick canopy -- many of whom are vulnerable to hunting and overexploitation.

"This takes you to the next level," Rhett Butler, a conservationist journalist and one of the paper's authors, said of bioacoustics "You get a much bigger picture."

As the recordings below illustrate, rainforest environments can produce walls of sound teeming with diverse pitches and calls. It's a wild metropolis.

"A wall is a good way to describe it," said Butler, the CEO of Mongabay, a nonprofit media and conservation organization. "Animals have evolved so that they call in certain frequencies, so they don’t drown each other out."

The first example comes from a protected, never logged forest in Berau, Indonesia.

Some forests, however, might appear quite intact and healthy from the view of satellites. But this can be deceiving. Forest fires can burn through the drought-ridden understory, the jungles may be overrun with invasive species, or certain critters might simply be gone.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

This is especially the case near logging roads, which can invite hunting.

"You can put devices where there’s logging or roads and hunting, and you can notice certain species disappear," said Butler.

Mashable ImageA bioacoustic device strapped to a tree in Berau, Indonesia.Credit: Justine E. Hausheer / TNC

Even plantations or areas near plantations can sustain bounties of life -- though an expert ear can spot missing species.

"It’s a monotonous sound rather than the full symphony," said Butler.

SEE ALSO:These are the animals that went extinct in 2018

Below is a recording from an acacia plantation in the rainforest of Berau Indonesia. An acacia plantation is a planted forest, which is harvested for wood.

The following three-minute track is from the Musiamunat community conservation area in Papua New Guinea.

Today, vast swaths of rainforest are actively deforested to make way for crops and provide land for cattle. It's a challenging scenario, as deforestation is not just driven by industry: Often farmers living in extreme poverty deforest the land, just so they can feed themselves.

According to Mongabay, between 2000 and 2005, Brazil alone lost an area of forest larger than the nation of Greece.

What's more, rainforests play an outsized role sustaining a stable climate on Earth. These ecosystems naturally absorb carbon dioxide -- a potent greenhouse gas -- from the air. Though conserving rainforests isn't nearly the sole remedy to mitigating human-caused climate change, which is now advancing at an accelerated pace, these ancient forests are a critical part the solution.

The planet's carbon dioxide levels are now the highest they've been in 15 million years.


Featured Video For You
Ever wonder how the universe might end?

NASA developed a ventilator to treat COVID
Celestron telescopes on sale: Save up to 39%