Grow Magazine Fall 2019

Page 12

Field Not es

BO R N E O AN D PAPUA N E W G U I N E A

The Sounds of Biodiversity

A bioacoustic recorder in Borneo’s tropical forest is shown here in January 2019. The recorders are preprogrammed to capture all sounds in the environment on a weekly basis.

12

grow

FALL 2019

It’s said that a picture is worth a thousand words. To Zuzana Burivalova, an audio recording is worth a thousand pictures. That’s the beauty of bioacoustics, Burivalova’s area of focus as a new faculty member in the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology. She’s using the methods of this emerging science to better understand biodiversity in tropical forests. “Bioacoustics and soundscape ecology are all about figuring out where biodiversity is and how it’s changing using the sounds that animals make,” says Burivalova, who also has an appointment with the UW Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies. “In a tropical forest, you don’t see many animals, but you can hear a ton. At times you can hear 30 species within a minute.” The ability to hear biodiversity adds another implement to the conservation biology tool belt. Historically, scientists would visit a forest and count the species they could see, a time-consuming, costly effort that is prone to bias. Motion-detecting cameras, another tool, are great for capturing large animals on the ground but can miss smaller animals and those in the tree canopies. “Scientists have really started leveraging the idea of bioacoustics as they try to develop ways to monitor biodiversity more cheaply and effectively — and with less bias,” explains Burivalova. “We now have the computing power and data storage to do this work that we didn’t have 10 years ago. Analyzing the data is really interdisciplinary, and I work with computer scientists and engineers to get the most out of it.” To capture this data, Burivalova visits tropical forests to place recorders that use small memory cards. They can be programmed to record at specific times, such as the morning or evening choruses, when many animals vocalize. They can also be left in the field over months or seasons to track daily and seasonal changes. Memory cards are then collected, and their recordings are uploaded into an online database for analysis. “I listen for and analyze how filled up the frequency spectrum is with different kinds of sounds,” says Burivalova. “If you think of an orchestra, you have instruments that play at different frequencies. If, let’s say, the violinists didn’t show up, we would see a gap in the soundscape. For me, those instruments are different species, and I can calculate how saturated

Zuzana Burivalova looks over the selective logging harvest plan with collaborators from a logging company and The Nature Conservancy to help decide where to place bioacoustic recorders.

Photo by Justine Hausheer, The Nature Conservancy

the soundscape is at any moment.” So far, Burivalova has recorded biodiversity in Papua New Guinea and Borneo, and she started a new project in Gabon in September. In Papua New Guinea, she found that even small disturbances in the forests can change the “signatures” of the soundscape. For instance, she discovered that forest fragmentation, which can be caused by anything from planting a garden to clearing a small patch for a cacao plantation, leads to less vocalization during the dawn and dusk choruses. And after selective logging of single trees in Indonesia, soundscapes became more homogeneous and less saturated at various frequencies compared to untouched forests.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.