In temperate climates, bird song is the main contributor to ournatural sound scapes. Since the 19 fifties, the american bird population has declined by three billion birds. In europe, over the last forty years, wehave seen a loss of 600 million birds occurring from theegifona. And all those individuals which once would have contributed to this landscape are now gone. We're rially interested in trying to understand the impacts of ongoing by adversity losss for sound scape quality.
As our environments change, so too do the sounds they make — and this change in soundscape can effect us in a whole host of ways, from our wellbeing to the way we think about conservation. In this Podcast Extra we hear from one researcher, Simon Butler, who is combining citizen science data with technology to recreate soundscapes lost to the past. Butler hopes to better understand how soundscapes change in response to changes in the environment, and use this to look forward to the soundscapes of the future.Nature Communications: Bird population declines and species turnover are changing the acoustic properties of spring soundscapesSubscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.
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