Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Clive Thompson on How Man-Made Noise May Be Altering Earth's Ecology

http://www.wired.com/science/planetearth/magazine/16-06/st_thompson

Bernie Krause listens to nature for a living. The 69-year-old is a field recording scientist: He heads into the wilderness to document the noises made by native fauna — crickets chirping in the Amazon rain forest, frogs croaking in the Australian outback.

But Krause has noticed something alarming. The natural sound of the world is vanishing. He'll be deep inside the Amazon, recording that cricket, but when he listens carefully he also hears machinery: The distant howl of a 747 or the dull roar of a Hummer miles way.

Krause has a word for the pristine acoustics of nature: biophony. It's what the world sounds like in the absence of humans. But in 40 percent of the locations where Krause has recorded over the past 40 years, human-generated noise has infiltrated the wilderness. "It's getting harder and harder to find places that aren't contaminated," he says.

This isn't just a matter of aesthetics. The contamination of biophony may soon become a serious environmental issue — Krause says that man-made sounds are already wreaking havoc with animal communication. We worry about the carbon emissions from SUVs and airplanes; maybe we should be equally concerned about the racket they cause.

Krause's argument is simple. In a biophony, animals divide up the acoustic spectrum so they don't interfere with one another's voices. He shows me a spectrogram of a wilderness recording, in which all the component noises are mapped according to pitch. It looks like the musical score for an orchestra, with each instrument in its place. No two species are using the same frequency. "That's part of how they coexist so well," Krause says. When they issue mating calls or all-important warning cries, they aren't masked by the noises of other animals.

But what happens when man-made noise — anthrophony, as Krause dubs it — intrudes on the natural symphony? Maybe it's the low rumble of nearby construction or the high whine of a turboprop. Either way, it interferes with a segment of the spectrum already in use, and suddenly some animal can't make itself heard. The information flow in the jungle is compromised.

Krause has heard this happen all over the world. For example, the population of spadefoot toads in the Yosemite region of the Sierras is declining rapidly, and Krause thinks it's because of low-flying military training missions in the area. The toad calls lose their synchronicity, and coyotes and owls home in on individual frogs trying to rejoin the chorus.

And as Krause has discovered, it doesn't take much to disrupt a soundscape. California's Lincoln Meadow, for example, has undergone only a tiny bit of logging, but the acoustic imprint of the region has completely changed in tandem with the landscape, and some species seem to have been displaced. The area looks the same as ever, "but if you listen to it, the density and diversity of sound is diminished," Krause says. "It has a weird feeling."

Biologists were initially skeptical of Krause's theory, but he's slowly gaining converts. Now even bigwigs like Harvard's E. O. Wilson have gone on record in support.

So how do you quiet an increasingly cacophonous world? Perhaps we should be developing not just clean tech but "quiet" tech, industrial machinery designed to run as silently as possible. More regulations could help, too. Cities have long had noise ordinances; wilderness areas could benefit from tighter protections as well.

Some of this is just about educating ourselves. We all recognize ecological tragedies by sight — when we see pictures of clear-cut areas, say, or melting Arctic ice shelves. Now we need to learn to listen to the earth, too.

Last year, Krause brought biophony to the masses by creating an extraordinarily cool add-on for Google Earth. Download it from his WildSanctuary.com site and you can click on dozens of locations worldwide to hear snippets of their soundscape.

I select the Amazon rain forest and my office is suddenly filled with a mesmerizing mix of hoots, cries, and rustling. It's spooky — like nothing I've ever heard before.

And like nothing I'll ever hear again, if we don't watch out. "Earth has a voice," Krause says. "We can't let it go silent."

Email clive@clivethompson.net.

Saturday, April 05, 2008

VIDEO: Global Dimming (BBC Horizon)

There was no nuclear war. Here's how man died:

50 mts 07 secs

Please click the Play button above.

"You are contradicting Global Warming? Do you know how many millions are spent on Global Warming research? And you are contradicting it?"

A must watch documentary!

P.S. - How do you feel now, my high school science teacher? I had no data, no science then, but was this or was this not my hypothesis that you considered too fantastic?

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Global Warming Converts

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

VIDEO: Nobel Gore

3 mts 54 secs

Monday, January 01, 2007

VIDEO: The World on Fire

1 mt 47 secs

A warning will appear. Click OK to allow the ActiveX control required to play this video.



Allow the controller to load above, and then click on play button once it becomes available.

Sarah McLachlan's The World on Fire

Friday, June 30, 2006

The Meatrix II: Revolting



The Meatrix guys have come up with the sequel. Funny AND disturbing.

In case you haven't seen the original, click here.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

DOC: What is Happening to the Planet?

Selected Satellite Images of the Changing Environment by United Nations Environment Programme. See what's happening to YOUR neighborhood!

Click here to open

Sunday, May 21, 2006

The World's Ecological Deficit

This cartogram depicts the world's ecological deficit. Countries have been stretched to indicate their effective consumption. Reds are deficits, greens are surpluses.


Click on the image to enlarge.

Friday, November 04, 2005

VIDEO: Meet Your Meat

PETA's propaganda video Meet Your Meat to promote vegetarianism.

12 mts 49 secs

Click on the image above, and then click on play button once it becomes available.

Sunday, September 19, 2004

VIDEO: We Were Humans

3 mts 10 secs

Click on the image above, and then click on play button once it becomes available.

Lucca Co's presentation for peace.

Thursday, June 24, 2004

The Meatrix










Excellent work by TheMeatrix.Com. May just turn you a vegetarian.

Friday, September 19, 2003

DOC: Strategies for a Sustainable World

Beyond greening, beyond pollution control - how to ensure sustainable development.

Click here to read