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Acoustic monitoring of tropical forests to assess biodiversity

A research study demonstrates how the use of simple acoustic monitoring devices positioned in tropical forests provides new insights into rain forest biodiversity. This falls part of the emerging field of bioacoustics, which is beginning to be used to monitoring animal biodiversity in areas like tropical forests under various conservation schemes. Bioacoutstics concerns investigation of sound production, dispersion and reception in animals.

The research, performed so far in Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, demonstrates how it is possible to develop an acoustic network to create a soundscape. Such soundscapes provide a baseline for future assessments of biodiversity, and can assess the human impact upon the climate. This adds to established ways of surveying the forest environment (like trekking) and more recent advances like using satellites or methods such as canopy-penetrating LIDAR.

In terms of application, lead scientist Eddie Game stated: “Some species, like gibbons or hornbills, are comfortably heard 500 meters away and sometimes more, but typically bioacoustic monitors are sampling the soundscape in the immediate couple of hundred meters…pretty much the range of human hearing and certainly capture birds, amphibians, many mammals and many (maybe most) insects.”

The roll out of the technology will be possible, based on the model, to other researchers to run similar studies based on a drop in the costs of the required listening devices plus data storage systems.

The research has been published in the journal Science. The research paper is simply titled “The sound of a tropical forest.”

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Dr. Tim Sandle is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for science news. Tim specializes in science, technology, environmental, business, and health journalism. He is additionally a practising microbiologist; and an author. He is also interested in history, politics and current affairs.

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