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Some animals make the strangest, most unexpected sounds that will leave you speechless. From deep-sea creatures with eerie ...
All three animals were reacting to sound bites from boomboxes in the woods, part of a study measuring the effect of outdoor recreationists’ noise on wildlife.
The sounds of animals walking, chewing food and panting, for example, are almost always recorded by human “ Foley artists ” in a sound studio far away from the filming location, often weeks or ...
The sounds are produced through physical effects caused by a change in their local conditions. What today's discovery shows is that these sounds can be useful to other animals, and possibly plants ...
Recording and analyzing forest soundscapes can be an effective way of monitoring changes in animal communities in tropical forests and human presence, researchers say in a new commentary published ...
Ken Marten, Douglas Quine, Peter Marler, Sound Transmission and Its Significance for Animal Vocalization: II. Tropical Forest Habitats, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, Vol. 2, No. 3 (1977), pp.