"But Sue Anne Zollinger, an ornithologist from Manchester Metropolitan University, cautions: Don't believe everything you hear. With the decrease in traffic, there's less noise pollution. That means birds have less noise to compete with, she says. 'Although our perception might be that they're singing louder, it's actually likely in places that are typically noisy that they're singing more quietly than normal... But when the noise is gone, they're probably singing quieter than they do normally.'"
NPR reports.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
CAT MOONLIGHT
CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT MOONLIGHT CAT M...
-
This version of The Peaceable Kingdom , from the mid-1840s, includes William Penn negotiating with Native Americans. He often included this ...
-
Phrenology is the pseudo-science of studying bumps on the skull ("When the forehead is perfectly perpendicular, from the hair to the e...
-
Francis Bacon is the icon of messy-studio advocates. He was renowned as much for the awful state of his studio as for his brilliant painting...
No comments:
Post a Comment