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Academic & Professional Books  Ornithology  Biology, Ecology & Behaviour

The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies

Monograph
Series: Ornithological Monographs Volume: 74
By: Clinton D Francis(Editor), Jessica L Blickley(Editor)
110 pages, b/w illustrations, tables
The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies
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  • The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies ISBN: 9780943610931 Paperback Jan 2012 In stock
    £37.99
    #199067
Price: £37.99
About this book Contents Customer reviews Related titles

About this book

In just nine chapters, The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies does a thorough job of identifying how animals and researchers are affected by noise. The opening chapter by Clinton Francis and Jessica Blickley reviews the rationale for The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies and briefly reviews each of the chapters. The chapters show how noise influences avian communication, behavior, habitat use, breeding behavior, and our ability to study birds. We learn that noise can substantially reduce acoustic detection of birds, which can cause biased estimates of species richness and community diversity. And these negative impacts of noise can occur even when that noise would be considered mild. Although we are now well aware of how differences in vegetative cover can influence detectibility, noise has clear implications for bird surveys that monitor population trends, habitat use, and various behavioral studies. Noise can influence nest predation by altering communication between birds as well as altering predator activity. Noise not only alters communication, but can cause physiological stress.

The Influence of Anthropogenic Noise on Birds and Bird Studies has lessons for all researchers. The editor encourage the readers to carefully consider how noise be it natural or human-induced, can influence animal behavior and, potentially, the results of research work.

Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Research and perspectives on the study of anthropogenic noise and birds   1
Chapter 2. Effects of noise pollution on birds: A brief review of our knowledge   6
Chapter 3. Potential acoustic masking of greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) display components by chronic industrial noise   23
Chapter 4. Behavioral responses by two songbirds to natural-gas-well compressor noise   36
Chapter 5. Acoustic space is affected by anthropogenic habitat features: Implications for avian vocal communication   47
Chapter 6. Constraints on acoustic signaling among birds breeding in secondary cavities: The effects of weather, cavity material, and noise on sound propagation   63
Chapter 7. Effects of gas-well-compressor noise on the ability to detect birds during surveys in northwest New Mexico   78
Chapter 8. Experimental determination of the response of golden-cheeked warblers (Setophaga chrysoparia) to road construction noise   91
Chapter 9. Are nest predators absent from noisy areas or unable to locate nests?   101

Customer Reviews

Monograph
Series: Ornithological Monographs Volume: 74
By: Clinton D Francis(Editor), Jessica L Blickley(Editor)
110 pages, b/w illustrations, tables
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