Hubbry Logo
logo
Soundscape ecology
Community hub

Soundscape ecology

logo
0 subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia
A spectrogram of the soundscape of Mount Rainier National Park in the United States. Highlighted areas show marmot, bird, insect and aircraft noises.

Soundscape ecology is the study of the acoustic relationships between living organisms, human and other, and their environment, whether the organisms are marine or terrestrial. First appearing in the Handbook for Acoustic Ecology edited by Barry Truax, in 1978,[1] the term has occasionally been used, sometimes interchangeably, with the term acoustic ecology. Soundscape ecologists also study the relationships between the three basic sources of sound that comprise the soundscape: those generated by organisms are referred to as the biophony; those from non-biological natural categories are classified as the geophony, and those produced by humans, the anthropophony.

Increasingly, soundscapes are dominated by a sub-set of anthropophony (sometimes referred to in older, more archaic terminology as "anthropogenic noise"), or technophony, the overwhelming presence of electro-mechanical noise. This sub-class of noise pollution or disturbance may produce a negative effect on a wide range of organisms. Variations in soundscapes as a result of natural phenomena and human endeavor may have wide-ranging ecological effects as many organisms have evolved to respond to acoustic cues that emanate primarily from undisturbed habitats.

Soundscape ecologists use recording devices, audio tools, and elements of traditional ecological and acoustic analyses to study soundscape structure. Soundscape ecology has deepened current understandings of ecological issues and established profound visceral connections to ecological data. The preservation of natural soundscapes is now a recognized conservation goal.

Background

[edit]

As an academic discipline, soundscape ecology shares some characteristics with other fields of inquiry but is also distinct from them in significant ways.[2] For instance, acoustic ecology is also concerned with the study of multiple sound sources. However, acoustic ecology, which derives from the founding work of R. Murray Schafer and Barry Truax, primarily focuses on human perception of soundscapes. Soundscape ecology seeks a broader perspective by considering soundscape effects on communities of living organisms, human and other, and the potential interactions between sounds in the environment.[3] Compared to soundscape ecology, the discipline of bioacoustics tends to have a narrower interest in individual species' physiological and behavioral mechanisms of auditory communication. Soundscape ecology also borrows heavily from some concepts in landscape ecology, which focuses on ecological patterns and processes occurring over multiple spatial scales.[2][4] Landscapes may directly influence soundscapes as some organisms use physical features of their habitat to alter their vocalizations. For example, baboons and other animals exploit specific habitats to generate echoes of the sounds they produce.[2][3]

The function and importance of sound in the environment may not be fully appreciated unless one adopts an organismal perspective on sound perception, and, in this way, soundscape ecology is also informed by sensory ecology.[2][4] Sensory ecology focuses on understanding the sensory systems of organisms and the biological function of information obtained from these systems. In many cases, humans must acknowledge that sensory modalities and information used by other organisms may not be obvious from an anthropocentric viewpoint. This perspective has already highlighted many instances where organisms rely heavily on sound cues generated within their natural environments to perform important biological functions. For example, a broad range of crustaceans are known to respond to biophony generated around coral reefs. Species that must settle on reefs to complete their developmental cycle are attracted to reef noise while pelagic and nocturnal crustaceans are repelled by the same acoustic signal, presumably as a mechanism to avoid predation (predator densities are high in reef habitats).[5] Similarly, juvenile fish may use biophony as a navigational cue to locate their natal reefs,[6] and may also be encouraged to resettle damaged coral reefs by playback of healthy reef sound.[7] Other species' movement patterns are influenced by geophony, as in the case of the reed frog which is known to disperse away from the sound of fire.[8] In addition, a variety of bird and mammal species use auditory cues, such as movement noise, in order to locate prey.[9] Disturbances created by periods of environmental noise may also be exploited by some animals while foraging. For example, insects that prey on spiders concentrate foraging activities during episodes of environmental noise to avoid detection by their prey.[10] These examples demonstrate that many organisms are highly capable of extracting information from soundscapes.

Terminology

[edit]
Natural soundscapes include natural but non-biological "geophonic" sounds (such as the water of the ocean) and the "biophonic" sounds of animals (such as bird calls).

According to academic Bernie Krause, soundscape ecology serves as a lens into other fields including medicine, music, dance, philosophy, environmental studies, etc. (the soundscape).[11][2] Krause sees the soundscape of a given region as the sum of three separate sound sources (as described by Gage and Krause) defined as follows:

  • Geophony, from the Greek prefix, geo, meaning earth-related, and phon, meaning sound, is a neologism used to describe one of three possible sonic components of a soundscape. It relates to the naturally occurring non-biological sounds coming from different types of habitats, whether marine or terrestrial.[12] Typically, geophony refers to the sounds of natural forces, such as water, wind, and thunder, occurring in wild, relatively undisturbed habitats.[13] But geophony is not limited to that narrow definition since these audio sources can be experienced nearly everywhere the effects of wind and water are expressed.
  • Biophony is a term introduced by Krause, who in 1998, first began to express the soundscape in terms of its acoustic sources. The biophony refers to the collective acoustic signatures generated by all sound-producing organisms in a given habitat at a given moment. It includes vocalizations that are used for conspecific communication in some cases. Biophony consists of the Greek prefix, bio, meaning life, and the suffix, phon, meaning sound, is a neologism used to describe the collective sound that vocalizing animals create in each given environment. It explores new definitions of animal territory as defined by biophony, and addresses changes in density, diversity, and richness of animal populations. Mapping soundscapes can help to illustrate possible driving mechanisms and provide a valuable tool for urban management and planning. However, quantifying biophony across urban landscapes has proven difficult in the presence of anthrophony, or sounds generated by humans. The metric percent biophony (PB) can be used to quantify biophony while avoiding noise bias. The complete absence of biophony or geophony in a given biome would be expressed as dysphonia (from the Greek meaning the inability to produce a proper collective voice in this case). The niche hypothesis (also known as the acoustic niche hypothesis; ANH),[14] an early version of the term biophony, describes the acoustic bandwidth partitioning process that occurs in still-wild biomes by which non-human organisms adjust their vocalizations by frequency and time-shifting to compensate for vocal territory occupied by other vocal creatures. Thus each species evolves to establish and maintain its own acoustic bandwidth so that its voice is not masked. For instance, notable examples of clear partitioning and species discrimination can be found in the spectrograms derived from the biophonic recordings made in most uncompromised tropical and subtropical rain forests. Additional studies with certain insects and amphibians tend to confirm the hypothesis.[15][16]
  • Anthropophony is another term introduced by Krause along with colleague, Stuart Gage. It represents human generated sound from either humans, themselves, or the electro-mechanical technologies they employ. The term, anthropophony, consisting of the Greek prefix, anthropo, meaning human, and the suffix, phon, meaning sound is a neologism used to describe all sound produced by humans, whether coherent, such as music, theatre, and language, or incoherent and chaotic such as random signals generated primarily by electromechanical means.[17][18] Anthropophony is divided into two sub-categories. Controlled sound, such as music, language, and theatre, and chaotic or incoherent sound sometimes referred to as noise.[19]

According to Krause various combinations of these acoustic expressions across space and time generate unique soundscapes.[citation needed]

Soundscape ecologists seek to investigate the structure of soundscapes, explain how they are generated, and study how organisms interrelate acoustically. A number of hypotheses have been proposed to explain the structure of soundscapes, particularly elements of biophony. For instance, an ecological theory known as the acoustic adaptation hypothesis predicts that acoustic signals of animals are altered in different physical environments in order to maximize their propagation through the habitat.[2][19] In addition, acoustic signals from organisms may be under selective pressure to minimize their frequency (pitch) overlap with other auditory features of the environment. This acoustic niche hypothesis is analogous to the classical ecological concept of niche partitioning. It suggests that acoustic signals in the environment should display frequency partitioning as a result of selection acting to maximize the effectiveness of intraspecific communication for different species. Observations of frequency differentiation among insects, birds, and anurans support the acoustic niche hypothesis.[20][3] Organisms may also partition their vocalization frequencies to avoid overlap with pervasive geophonic sounds. For example, territorial communication in some frog species takes place partially in the high frequency ultrasonic spectrum.[21] This communication method represents an evolutionary adaptation to the frogs' riparian habitat where running water produces constant low frequency sound. Invasive species that introduce new sounds into soundscapes can disrupt acoustic niche partitioning in native communities, a process known as biophonic invasion.[4] Although adaptation to acoustic niches may explain the frequency structure of soundscapes, spatial variation in sound is likely to be generated by environmental gradients in altitude, latitude, or habitat disturbance.[4] These gradients may alter the relative contributions of biophony, geophony, and anthrophony to the soundscape. For example, when compared with unaltered habitats, regions with high levels of urban land-use are likely to have increased levels of anthrophony and decreased physical and organismal sound sources. Soundscapes typically exhibit temporal patterns, with daily and seasonal cycles being particularly prominent.[4] These patterns are often generated by the communities of organisms that contribute to biophony. For example, birds chorus heavily at dawn and dusk while anurans call primarily at night; the timing of these vocalization events may have evolved to minimize temporal overlap with other elements of the soundscape.[4][22]

Methods

[edit]

Acoustic information describing the environment is the primary data required in soundscape ecology studies. Technological advances have provided improved methods for the collection of such data. Automated recording systems allow for temporally replicated samples of soundscapes to be gathered with relative ease. Data collected from such equipment can be extracted to generate a visual representation of the soundscape in the form of a spectrogram.[2] Spectrograms provide information on a number of sound properties that may be subject to quantitative analysis. The vertical axis of a spectrogram indicates the frequency of a sound while the horizontal axis displays the time scale over which sounds were recorded. In addition, spectrograms display the amplitude of sound, a measure of sound intensity. Ecological indices traditionally used with species-level data, such as diversity and evenness, have been adapted for use with acoustic metrics.[2] These measures provide a method of comparing soundscapes across time or space. For example, automated recording devices have been used to gather acoustic data in different landscapes across yearlong time scales, and diversity metrics were employed to evaluate daily and seasonal fluctuations in soundscapes across sites. The demise of a habitat can be seen by measuring before and after "logging" for example.[23][2] Spatial patterns of sound may also be studied using tools familiar to landscape ecologists such as geographic information systems (GIS).[4] Finally, recorded samples of the soundscape can provide proxy measures for biodiversity inventories in cases where other sampling methods are impractical or inefficient.[24] These techniques may be especially important for the study of rare or elusive species that are especially difficult to monitor in other ways.

Insights from soundscape ecology: anthropophony

[edit]

Although soundscape ecology has only recently been defined as an independent academic discipline (it was first described in 2011 and formalized at the first meeting of the International Society of Ecoacoustics, held in Paris in 2014), many earlier ecological investigations have incorporated elements of soundscape ecology theory. For instance, a large body of work has focused on documenting the effects of anthropophony on wildlife. Anthropophony (the uncontrolled version, is often used synonymously with noise pollution) can emanate from a variety of sources, including transportation networks or industry, and may represent a pervasive disturbance to natural systems even in seemingly remote regions such as national parks.[9] A major effect of noise is the masking of organismal acoustic signals that contain information. Against a noisy background, organisms may have trouble perceiving sounds that are important for intraspecific communication, foraging, predator recognition, or a variety of other ecological functions.[9] In this way, anthropogenic noise may represent a soundscape interaction wherein increased anthropophony interferes with biophonic processes. The negative effects of anthropogenic noise impact a wide variety of taxa including fish, amphibians, birds, and mammals.[25] In addition to interfering with ecologically important sounds, anthropophony can also directly affect the biological systems of organisms. Noise exposure, which may be perceived as a threat, can lead to physiological changes.[9] For example, noise can increase levels of stress hormones, impair cognition, reduce immune function, and induce DNA damage.[26] Although much of the research on anthropogenic noise has focused on behavioral and population-level responses to noise disturbance, these molecular and cellular systems may prove promising areas for future work.

Anthropophony and birds

[edit]
Anthropophony, sound generated from human activities, plays an important role in contemporary soundscapes.

Birds have been used as study organisms in much of the research concerning wildlife responses to anthropogenic noise, and the resulting literature documents many effects that are relevant to other taxa affected by anthropophony. Birds may be particularly sensitive to noise pollution given that they rely heavily on acoustic signals for intraspecific communication. Indeed, a wide range of studies demonstrate that birds use altered songs in noisy environments.[25] Research on great tits in an urban environment revealed that male birds inhabiting noisy territories tended to use higher frequency sounds in their songs.[27] Presumably these higher-pitched songs allow male birds to be heard above anthropogenic noise, which tends to have high energy in the lower frequency range thereby masking sounds in that spectra. A follow-up study of multiple populations confirmed that great tits in urban areas sing with an increased minimum frequency relative to forest-dwelling birds.[28] In addition, this study suggests that noisy urban habitats host birds that use shorter songs but repeat them more rapidly. In contrast to frequency modulations, birds may simply increase the amplitude (loudness) of their songs to decrease masking in environments with elevated noise.[29] Experimental work and field observations show that these song alterations may be the result of behavioral plasticity rather than evolutionary adaptations to noise (i.e., birds actively change their song repertoire depending on the acoustic conditions they experience).[30] In fact, avian vocal adjustments to anthropogenic noise are unlikely to be the products of evolutionary change simply because high noise levels are a relatively recent selection pressure.[22] However, not all bird species adjust their songs to improve communication in noisy environments, which may limit their ability to occupy habitats subject to anthropogenic noise.[31] In some species, individual birds establish a relatively rigid vocal repertoire when they are young, and these sorts of developmental constraints may limit their ability to make vocal adjustments later in life.[22] Thus, species that do not or cannot modify their songs may be particularly sensitive to habitat degradation as a result of noise pollution.[27][31]

Effects of anthropophony on auditory communication are well studied in the great tit.

Even among birds that are able to alter their songs to be better heard in environments inundated with anthropophony, these behavioral changes may have important fitness consequences. In the great tit, for example, there is a tradeoff between signal strength and signal detection that depends on song frequency.[32] Male birds that include more low frequency sounds in their song repertoire experience better sexual fidelity from their mates which results in increased reproductive success. However, low frequency sounds tend to be masked when anthropogenic noise is present, and high frequency songs are more effective at eliciting female responses under these conditions. Birds may therefore experience competing selective pressures in habitats with high levels of anthropogenic noise: pressure to call more at lower frequencies in order to improve signal strength and secure good mates versus opposing pressure to sing at higher frequencies in order to ensure that calls are detected against a background of anthrophony. In addition, use of certain vocalizations, including high amplitude sounds that reduce masking in noisy environments, may impose energetic costs that reduce fitness.[22] Because of the reproductive trade-offs and other stresses they impose on some birds, noisy habitats may represent ecological traps, habitats in which individuals have reduced fitness yet are colonized at rates greater than or equal to other habitats.[25][33]

Anthropophony may ultimately have population- or community-level impacts on avian fauna. One study focusing on community composition found that habitats exposed to anthropophony hosted fewer bird species than regions without noise, but both areas had similar numbers of nests.[34] In fact, nests in noisy habitats had higher survival than those laid in control habitats, presumably because noisy environments hosted fewer western scrub jays which are major nest predators of other birds. Thus, anthropophony can have negative effects on local species diversity, but the species capable of coping with noise disturbance may actually benefit from the exclusion of negative species interactions in those areas. Other experiments suggest that noise pollution has the potential to affect avian mating systems by altering the strength of pair bonds. When exposed to high amplitude environmental noise in a laboratory setting, zebra finches, a monogamous species, show a decreased preference for their mated partners.[35] Similarly, male reed buntings in quiet environments are more likely to be part of a mated pair than males in noisy locations.[30] Such effects may ultimately result in reduced reproductive output of birds subject to high levels of environmental noise.[36]

Anthropophony and insects

[edit]

In comparison to other taxa, relatively little research has been done on the effects of anthropogenic noise on insects. However, current knowledge indicates that they are likely affected by anthropogenic noise to a greater extent than many other animal groups.[37][38] Insects, like birds, rely heavily on acoustic signals for communication, which can be disrupted by noise. However, while birds and other taxa often studied for effects of anthropogenic noise primarily rely on airborne acoustic signals, insects frequently utilize vibrational signals for communication.[39] The properties of vibrational signals increases the threat posed to them by anthropogenic noise. Furthermore, due to limited dispersal capacity and narrow habitat requirements, insects may be unable to avoid anthropogenic noise by moving to quieter locations.[38] Certain behavioral responses could allow for insects to compensate for the presence of anthropogenic noise, but physiological and environmental constraints limit the efficacy of these strategies.

As a result of interference with communication, insects are at a greater risk of experiencing negative fitness consequences due to impacts on mating, foraging, and survival. Noise that masks or distorts signals used for mate location or courtship can prevent mating from taking place.[40] Similarly, noise that prevents insects from perceiving prey or potential dangers may result in decreased foraging success and survival.[41]

Mechanism of Impact

[edit]

Vibrational signals used by most insects have the majority of their power concentrated below 2kHz, a frequency range that is lower than most airborne communication but has high overlap with many types of anthropogenic noise.[37] As a result, anthropogenic noise can mask and/or distort the properties of vibrational signals.[38] Noise that overlaps acoustic signals can prevent insects from identifying intraspecific courtship signals, discerning the meaning of signals, and perceiving signals made by predator or prey species.[42] Any reduced ability to recognize and locate mates, avoid predation and other dangers, or forage for food is likely to have negative consequences for survival and reproduction.[38]

Responses to Noise

[edit]

Insects display a variety of responses to noise, such as shifting signal frequency or rate to reduce overlap with noise[43] and altering signal timing to take advantage of noise gaps. The efficacy of these responses varies depending on insects' ability to plastically modulate their behavior or signals, as well as the characteristics of the anthropogenic noise.[44]

Some insects can modulate the frequencies of their signals, shifting them higher or lower to avoid overlap with other noise.[43] For example, male Chorthippus biguttulus grasshoppers, which use airborne signals, produce higher frequency signals when living by roads to avoid overlap with low frequency traffic noise.[43] Similarly, female Nezara viridula stinkbugs, which use vibrational signals, alter the dominant frequency of their calling song to avoid overlap and interference by vibratory disturbances.[45] The ability of an insect species to modulate signals is constrained by physiological limits to the range of frequencies they are capable of producing.[46] Additionally, numerous anthropogenic noises occupy a wide range of frequencies that may exceed the frequency range that insects can produce.[38]

Insects may alter the timing or structure of their signals to avoid overlap with noise by changing the rate of signal production, the pacing of signal components, or the length of signal components.[38] Thermals constraints on signal rates and timing can limit the ability to modulate signal behavior to seasons or times of day when the temperature is within an optimal range.[47]

Enchenopa binotata treehoppers respond to noise by identifying and signaling within gaps of noise.

Insects can also alter their behavior in response to noise by signaling within "gaps" of anthropogenic noise, during which there is less noise and less risk of being overlap.[46] This response is dependent on both the ability to quickly perceive a noise gap and then to initiate a signal. Insect species that utilize this technique include the treehopper Enchenopa Binotata and katydid Copiphora brevirostris, both of which identify gaps in wind noise to initiate signaling during short quiet periods.[48][49] In environments when anthropogenic noise is constant, such as gas fields and wind farms, this behavioral modification likely is not a potential option for insects.[47]

Fitness Consequences

[edit]

Interference from anthropogenic noise on insect communication can affect mating, foraging, and survival.

Disruption of mating by noise masking occurs when noise overlap reduces perception of signals and insects are unable to modulate signaling to avoid it. This can hinder species recognition and mate location, and may preclude courtship and mating altogether.[40][50][51] Decreased mating has been observed in multiple species as a result of interfering noise, including Schizocosa ocreata wolf spiders, Graminella nigrifrons leafhoppers, and Dendroctonus pine beetles.[52][53][54] Even if insects can alter signaling behavior, they still might suffer reductions in fitness if females do not recognize the altered signals or respond to them as readily as non-altered signals.[55] Under noisy conditions, females may also choose to mate with the first male encountered rather than sampling and comparing between males.[56]

Noise can also affect interactions among species. When noise masks airborne or vibrational signals made by prey, insects that rely on these cues to locate prey may be unable to, or prey species may alter their behavior to compensate for the noise.[41] These changes can reduce foraging success, thus constraining growth and limiting reproduction. Alternatively, insects that utilize warning signals or that detect potential dangers through predator vibrations may be unable to do so, leading to increased predation rates.[57]

Ecological Impacts

[edit]

While there is little research on community or ecosystem level impacts of anthropogenic noise on insects, studies indicate that noise can decrease the diversity and abundance of insect communities.[58][59] Potential consequences of these shifts may lead to cascading effects on higher levels of the food chain, reduced ecological resilience, and the provision of critical ecosystem services such as pollination.[37]

Soundscape conservation

[edit]

The discipline of conservation biology has traditionally been concerned with the preservation of biodiversity and the habitats that organisms are dependent upon. However, soundscape ecology encourages biologists to consider natural soundscapes as resources worthy of conservation efforts. Soundscapes that come from relatively untrammeled habitats have value for wildlife as demonstrated by the numerous negative effects of anthropogenic noise on various species.[9] Organisms that use acoustic cues generated by their prey may be particularly impacted by human-altered soundscapes.[60] In this situation, the (unintentional) senders of the acoustic signals will have no incentive to compensate for masking imposed by anthropogenic sound. In addition, natural soundscapes can have benefits for human wellbeing and may help generate a distinct sense of place, connecting people to the environment and providing unique aesthetic experiences.[24] Because of the various values inherent in natural soundscapes, they may be considered ecosystem services that are provisioned by intact, functioning ecosystems.[2] Targets for soundscape conservation may include soundscapes necessary for the persistence of threatened wildlife, soundscapes that are themselves being severely altered by anthrophony, and soundscapes that represent unique places or cultural values.[24] Some governments and management agencies have begun to consider preservation of natural soundscapes as an environmental priority.[61][62][63] In the United States, the National Park Service's Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division is working to protect natural and cultural soundscapes.

See also

[edit]
  • Acoustic ecology – Studies the relationship, mediated through sound, between human beings and their environment
  • Aphonia – Medical condition leading to loss of voice
  • Bioacoustics – Study of sound relating to biology
  • Ecoacoustics – Study of the effect of environmental sound on organisms
  • Human auditory ecology
  • Silent Spring – Book by Rachel Carson about pesticides harming the environment
  • Soundscape – Audible characteristics, resonances of an acoustic environment
  • Spectrogram – Visual representation of the spectrum of frequencies of a signal as it varies with time
  • Zoomusicology – Field of musicology and zoology that studies the music of animals

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Soundscape ecology is an interdisciplinary scientific field that investigates the acoustic signatures of landscapes, encompassing the collective biological (biophony), geophysical (geophony), and anthropogenic (anthrophony) sounds produced by organisms, natural physical processes, and human activities within a defined spatial and temporal context.[1] This approach draws on bioacoustics, spatial ecology, and environmental acoustics to quantify how sound propagation, spectral composition, and temporal patterns reveal underlying ecological structures, such as species assemblages and habitat conditions.[2] Emerging in the late 20th century, the field was formalized through foundational recordings and conceptual frameworks developed by bioacoustician Bernie Krause, who documented pristine habitats and identified the niche hypothesis wherein species partition acoustic frequencies to minimize interference, thereby linking soundscapes directly to biodiversity metrics.[1] Key applications include passive acoustic monitoring for non-invasive assessment of ecosystem dynamics, detection of invasive species via altered sonic profiles, and evaluation of noise pollution's disruptive effects on wildlife communication and behavior, with empirical studies demonstrating reduced biophonic diversity in anthropogenically dominated areas.[3] Soundscape ecology thus provides causal insights into how acoustic cues serve as indicators of ecological integrity, enabling predictive modeling of environmental change without relying on visual or direct observational biases prevalent in traditional surveys.[4]

Historical Development

Soundscape ecology draws its foundational principles from acoustic ecology, which originated in the late 1960s with the World Soundscape Project at Simon Fraser University, led by R. Murray Schafer; this initiative emphasized the analysis of environmental sounds as a holistic acoustic environment, distinguishing between hi-fi (clear, information-rich) and lo-fi (noisy, masked) soundscapes to assess human perceptual responses to sonic landscapes. Acoustic ecology provided early conceptual tools for categorizing sound sources—such as natural, human, and mechanical noises—but focused primarily on cultural and perceptual dimensions rather than ecological processes.[5] Bioacoustics, a discipline tracing back to the mid-20th century with systematic studies of animal vocalizations (e.g., Donald Griffin's work on bat echolocation in the 1940s and 1950s), contributed rigorous methods for recording and analyzing biological sounds, including signal processing techniques to quantify frequency, amplitude, and temporal patterns in animal communication. This field established the acoustic niche hypothesis, articulated by Bernie Krause in 1987, positing that species partition acoustic space to reduce interference, thereby linking sound production to ecological competition and coexistence.[5] Landscape ecology, formalized in Europe during the 1930s by scholars like Carl Troll and later advanced in the United States through the 1980s with spatial pattern analysis (e.g., via patch dynamics and connectivity metrics), supplied frameworks for examining how habitat structure influences sound propagation, attenuation, and biodiversity distribution across scales.[6] These spatial tools enabled soundscape ecology to model how geomorphic features and land-use changes affect the composition and detectability of sonic elements.[7] Urban environmental acoustics, emerging post-World War II amid concerns over noise pollution (e.g., ISO standards for sound measurement from the 1950s onward), added quantitative metrics for anthropogenic sounds, highlighting their masking effects on natural biophony and informing early distinctions between geophony, biophony, and anthropophony. The synthesis of these fields culminated in soundscape ecology's emphasis on causal relationships between sonic patterns and ecosystem health, prioritizing empirical measurement over subjective perception alone.[5]

Formalization and Key Milestones

The foundations of soundscape ecology trace back to acoustic ecology, pioneered through the World Soundscape Project initiated in the late 1960s at Simon Fraser University under R. Murray Schafer. Schafer formalized the term "soundscape" in his 1977 book The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World, defining it as the ever-changing composition of natural and human-made sounds within a given environment, with an emphasis on auditory perception and noise pollution's societal impacts.[8] This work established core methodologies for sound mapping and analysis but remained primarily humanistic rather than ecologically oriented.[5] Bioacoustician Bernie Krause advanced an ecological dimension starting in the 1970s with extensive field recordings of natural habitats, culminating in his 1987 proposal of the acoustic niche hypothesis, which posits that species partition acoustic frequencies and timings to minimize interference, akin to spatial niches in ecology. Krause coined "biophony" to denote the aggregate of nonhuman biological sounds and began using "soundscape ecology" to frame these assemblages as indicators of ecosystem health and biodiversity, publishing syntheses of recording techniques by 2002.[5] The field achieved formal recognition as an interdisciplinary science in 2011, when Pijanowski, Farina, Gage, Dumyahn, and Krause published "Soundscape Ecology: The Science of Sound in the Landscape" in BioScience, delineating a research framework that integrates biophony, geophony (nonbiological natural sounds), and anthrophony (human-generated sounds) to quantify landscape-level ecological processes.[9] Concurrently, a special issue in Landscape Ecology (November 2011) outlined analytical challenges, spatial-temporal dynamics, and applications for monitoring biodiversity and anthropogenic impacts, marking the discipline's shift toward empirical, data-driven methodologies.[5] These publications catalyzed subsequent advancements, including standardized indices for soundscape composition and large-scale passive acoustic monitoring networks.

Core Concepts

Definition and Scope

Soundscape ecology is the scientific study of acoustic patterns within landscapes, integrating sounds from biological sources (biophony), geophysical phenomena (geophony), and human activities (anthropophony) that propagate through a given area and vary across space and time.[10] This field posits that soundscapes serve as proxies for ecological structure and function, capturing community-level interactions not easily discernible through visual surveys alone.[11] The discipline emerged as a synthesis of bioacoustics, landscape ecology, and information theory, formalized in peer-reviewed literature around 2011, though foundational concepts trace to earlier recordings and analyses by bioacousticians like Bernie Krause, who coined the terms biophony, geophony, and anthropophony in the 1990s to describe the layered composition of natural sound environments.[12][13] The scope of soundscape ecology encompasses empirical investigations into how acoustic signals influence species behavior, interspecific communication, and ecosystem dynamics, with applications in biodiversity assessment, habitat monitoring, and conservation planning.[14] Researchers employ passive acoustic recordings to quantify soundscape metrics, such as spectral occupancy and acoustic diversity indices, which correlate with faunal richness and environmental health; for instance, reductions in biophonic complexity often signal habitat degradation.[15] The field extends to modeling sound propagation influenced by terrain, vegetation, and atmospheric conditions, enabling predictions of acoustic niches and their disruption by noise pollution.[10] Unlike narrower bioacoustic studies focused on individual species vocalizations, soundscape ecology emphasizes holistic, community-scale acoustics, addressing macro-patterns in sound energy distribution across frequencies and seasons.[16] Key challenges within this scope include standardizing measurement protocols amid diverse recording technologies and developing robust analytical tools to parse overlapping sound sources, as outlined in proposed research agendas emphasizing spatial-temporal variability and anthropogenic overlays.[12] Empirical scope also involves interdisciplinary integration with fields like ornithology and marine ecology, where soundscapes inform restoration efforts by benchmarking pre-disturbance acoustic baselines against post-intervention recoveries.[17] Overall, the discipline prioritizes verifiable acoustic data to infer causal ecological relationships, cautioning against over-reliance on unvalidated indices without ground-truthing against faunal inventories.[15]

Soundscape Components

Soundscapes in ecological contexts are structured by three primary acoustic components: biophony, geophony, and anthrophony, which collectively represent the full array of sounds emanating from a landscape or seascape. This tripartite classification originates from the foundational work of Bernie Krause in the 1980s and was formalized in soundscape ecology by researchers such as Pijanowski et al. in 2011, emphasizing the integration of biological, geophysical, and human-generated sounds to assess ecosystem health.[9][5] Biophony encompasses all sounds produced by living organisms, including vocalizations, stridulations, and other bioacoustic signals from species such as birds, mammals, amphibians, insects, and plants (e.g., wind-induced leaf rustles interpreted as biotic). These contributions reflect biodiversity and interspecies acoustic niches, where species partition frequency bands and temporal slots to minimize interference, as evidenced in studies of avian choruses and insect ensembles. For instance, in healthy ecosystems, biophony exhibits high acoustic diversity indices, correlating with species richness; reductions often signal habitat degradation.[9][10] Geophony consists of non-biological natural sounds generated by physical environmental processes, such as wind, rain, thunder, waves, earthquakes, and flowing water. These abiotic elements provide a baseline acoustic layer that influences propagation and masking of other sounds; for example, heavy rainfall can attenuate high-frequency biophonic signals by up to 20-30 dB in tropical forests, altering detectability. Geophony varies predictably with weather patterns and geology, serving as a control in soundscape analyses to isolate biotic and anthropogenic effects.[9][18] Anthrophony includes all human-generated noises, from transportation (e.g., aircraft overflights averaging 50-70 dB at 1 km), industrial machinery, urban infrastructure, and even low-level technophony like electrical hums. This component often dominates in modified landscapes, with empirical data showing anthrophonic levels exceeding 60 dB in 70% of recorded U.S. national park soundscapes as of 2011, potentially masking biophony and disrupting ecological signaling. Interactions among components are dynamic; for example, anthrophony can feedback to suppress biophony through behavioral avoidance in fauna.[9][10] These components are not mutually exclusive and may overlap in spectrum or timing, requiring advanced spectrographic analysis to disentangle; soundscape ecology employs this framework to quantify ecological integrity, with biophony-geophony ratios serving as indicators of anthropogenic pressure.[9][5]

Methodological Foundations

Data Collection Techniques

Passive acoustic monitoring via autonomous recording units (ARUs) forms the cornerstone of data collection in soundscape ecology, enabling continuous, long-term capture of ecosystem sounds with minimal human intervention. These battery- or solar-powered devices, often equipped with weatherproof omnidirectional microphones, are deployed in arrays across study sites to record broadband audio encompassing biophony, geophony, and anthropophony over durations spanning weeks to years.[19] [20] ARUs facilitate scalable, cost-effective sampling that covers broad spatial and temporal scales, producing datasets suitable for detecting temporal patterns in acoustic activity without disturbing wildlife.[21] To optimize power and storage, ARUs frequently employ duty-cycled recording protocols, such as capturing 1-minute segments every 5-10 minutes, which balance data volume with logistical constraints while preserving ecological inferences.[20] Multichannel ARUs or microphone arrays extend this capability by providing spatial data, allowing localization of sound sources through beamforming or triangulation techniques, particularly useful for mapping propagation in complex terrains.[22] [23] Calibration for environmental factors like wind noise and microphone sensitivity ensures data fidelity, with standardized formats such as WAV files stored for subsequent analysis.[24] Complementary methods include manual acoustic surveys via handheld recorders for targeted, short-term validation or qualitative on-site listening to contextualize automated data, though these are less emphasized due to subjectivity and limited scalability.[24] In aquatic soundscapes, hydrophones replace or augment microphones to capture underwater acoustics, adapting ARU principles to submerged deployments for marine or freshwater studies.[25] Deployment strategies prioritize site selection based on habitat heterogeneity, with metadata logging for GPS coordinates, timestamps, and weather conditions to enable robust ecological interpretation.[4]

Analytical Methods and Indices

Analytical methods in soundscape ecology primarily involve processing audio recordings from passive acoustic monitoring devices to extract quantifiable features of biophony, geophony, and anthropophony. These methods include spectral and temporal analyses of sound energy distribution, often using Fourier transforms to generate spectrograms that visualize frequency content over time. Time series approaches, such as spectral analysis and principal component analysis, further decompose soundscapes into dominant patterns, enabling detection of periodicities in biological choruses or environmental noise. Machine learning techniques, including classification algorithms and generative models like GANs, are increasingly applied to identify species-specific signals or simulate ecological scenarios from spectrograms.[25][26][27][28] Acoustic indices represent a core subset of these methods, providing scalar summaries of soundscape properties without requiring species identification, which facilitates large-scale monitoring. Over 70 indices have been developed, derived from mathematical formulas applied to audio features like amplitude, frequency variance, and entropy. For instance, the Acoustic Diversity Index (ADI) quantifies spectral uniformity across frequency bands, penalizing dominant tones from machinery or single species to reflect diversity. The Acoustic Complexity Index (ACI) measures signal intermittency and amplitude variations, capturing structural complexity in biophonic layers. The Bioacoustic Index (BI) emphasizes mid-frequency ranges (2-8 kHz) associated with avian and insect calls, computing the area under the spectrogram curve weighted by frequency to approximate biological activity. These indices are typically calculated using open-source software packages that process raw waveforms or spectrograms, with parameters like frequency resolution and temporal windows influencing outputs.[29][15][30] Despite their efficiency, acoustic indices exhibit variability due to environmental factors and analytical choices; for example, applying filters for noise reduction or adjusting bandwidths can alter index values by up to 50% across sites, seasons, or land uses. A 2022 meta-analysis of 79 studies found weak to moderate correlations (r ≈ 0.3-0.5) between indices like ADI and ACI and biodiversity metrics such as species richness, with performance declining in anthropogenically dominated soundscapes where non-biological noise masks signals. Indices often fail to generalize across ecosystems, as biodiverse soundscapes lack universal acoustic signatures, limiting their use for causal inference without ground-truthed validation against faunal surveys. Researchers recommend combining indices with targeted analyses, such as coherence measures for interspecies interactions, and caution against overreliance due to confounding effects from propagation and recording artifacts.[31][32][33][34]

Natural Soundscape Dynamics

Biophony and Interspecies Acoustic Interactions

Biophony encompasses the collective array of sounds produced by non-human organisms within a given habitat or biome, including vocalizations, stridulations, and other acoustic signals from animals such as birds, frogs, insects, and mammals.[35][36] These sounds form a dynamic layer of the soundscape that reflects ecological health, biodiversity, and temporal patterns, with empirical recordings showing predictable daily and seasonal rhythms dominated by biophonic contributions in undisturbed environments.[37] In soundscape ecology, biophony is distinguished from geophony (non-biological natural sounds like wind or rain) and anthropophony (human-generated noise), allowing researchers to isolate biological activity for analysis.[5] Interspecies acoustic interactions within biophony arise from competition for auditory space, where co-occurring species evolve strategies to minimize interference in signal transmission and reception. The acoustic niche hypothesis posits that organisms partition the acoustic environment across dimensions such as frequency, timing, and spatial location to reduce masking and overlap, thereby enhancing communication efficacy.[14] For instance, in tropical wet forests, bird communities in Costa Rica and Hawai'i exhibit fine-scale temporal partitioning, with species adjusting call onset times to avoid overlap during dawn choruses, as documented in playback experiments and long-term recordings.[38] Empirical studies highlight partitioning in frequency and amplitude as well; anurans (frogs) in diverse assemblages demonstrate spatial and temporal segregation of calls, with citizen science data from over 1,000 recordings confirming reduced overlap in sympatric species through spectral analysis.[39] Similarly, in neotropical treefrogs like Hyla ebraccata, H. microcephala, and H. phlebodes, broad frequency overlap is mitigated by alternating call rates and durations, reducing interspecific masking in shared habitats.[40] Insect contributions, such as treehoppers' substrate-borne vibrations or cicadas' high-amplitude calls exceeding 100 dB, further illustrate niche separation, where louder, continuous signals from insects prompt vertebrates to shift to higher frequencies or nocturnal timing.[41] These interactions underscore biophony's role in revealing trophic dynamics, with disruptions from masking altering foraging, mating, and predator avoidance behaviors across taxa.[42] In temperate forests, seasonal and diel partitioning by birds minimizes competition, as evidenced by analyses showing species-specific peaks in vocal activity that align with resource availability rather than random overlap.[43]

Geophony and Environmental Influences

Geophony encompasses non-biological sounds produced by geophysical processes, including wind through vegetation, flowing water in rivers and streams, rainfall, thunder, waves, and abrupt events such as earthquakes, landslides, avalanches, and volcanic eruptions.[44] These sounds can be categorized as continuous (e.g., persistent river flow or ocean waves), ephemeral (e.g., intermittent wind or rain), or abrupt, each contributing distinct acoustic signatures to the soundscape.[44] Environmental factors significantly shape geophonic characteristics across spatial and temporal scales. Elevation gradients and topography modulate sound propagation and intensity, while global and microclimate dynamics influence variability; for instance, seasonal shifts like the Amazon's wet and dry periods or Alaska's rainy summers versus windy winters alter dominant geophonic elements.[44] Vegetation structure affects wind-induced sounds, with denser canopies amplifying rustling, and geological features like waterfalls generate persistent low-frequency noise that persists over long distances.[44] Climate change further modifies geophony by intensifying extreme weather events, potentially compressing temporal windows for other acoustic signals.[45] Geophonic sounds exert ecological influences by masking biophonic signals, particularly low-frequency animal vocalizations during high-wind events, which can impair detection and communication.[44] [10] However, some species adapt to geophony; torrent frogs (Amolops torrentis) enhance call detection amid stream noise, and rock-kipper frogs adjust call frequencies to counter waterfall interference, demonstrating evolutionary pressures from persistent geophysical acoustics.[44] Abrupt geophonic events, such as fire crackling, prompt dispersal behaviors in species like reed frogs, highlighting geophony's role in habitat selection and survival cues. Studies in sequoia forests quantify geophonic interference with biophony, underscoring the need to assess its plasticity in biological signaling.[10] In aquatic environments, intensified wind and rain during tropical storms like Debby in 2021 reduced fish sound production, illustrating short-term disruptions to marine soundscapes.[46]

Anthropogenic Influences

Sources and Propagation of Anthropophony

Anthropophony refers to sounds produced by human activities and technologies, including transportation, industry, and infrastructure operations, which increasingly overlay natural soundscapes in terrestrial ecosystems. Primary sources encompass road and rail traffic, aircraft overflights, construction equipment, industrial machinery, and recreational vehicles, with low-frequency dominant spectra often masking biotic signals. In remote protected areas, aircraft noise frequently predominates, as evidenced in a Swiss forest study where it appeared in 75% of 137,087 hourly recordings from August 2018 to July 2019, peaking midday and aligning with nearby airport schedules. Vehicular traffic constitutes a ubiquitous source in populated regions, generating continuous broadband noise levels exceeding 50 dB(A) at distances under 100 meters from highways.[47][48] Propagation of anthropophonic sounds in terrestrial environments depends on source intensity, frequency content, atmospheric conditions, topography, and vegetation density, enabling intrusion into otherwise pristine habitats. Low-frequency components from traffic and aircraft attenuate slowly, propagating over 10-20 km under stable atmospheric conditions like temperature inversions, which refract sound downward at night. Modeling frameworks such as SPreAD-GIS and ISO 9613-2 quantify these dynamics by integrating geographic data to predict exposure gradients for wildlife, revealing hotspots where noise exceeds natural ambient levels by 20-30 dB in forests adjacent to infrastructure. Terrain features like valleys can channel noise, amplifying effects in linear habitats, while dense foliage absorbs higher frequencies more readily than lows.[49][50]

Empirical Evidence of Impacts on Fauna

A meta-analysis of 108 experimental studies encompassing 109 species across amphibians, arthropods, birds, fish, mammals, molluscs, and reptiles demonstrated that anthropogenic noise induces significant negative effects on wildlife, with an overall standardized mean difference of 0.57 (95% CI: 0.27–0.88), indicating moderate impacts on behavior and physiology.[51] These effects are particularly pronounced in mammals (SMD = 1.79) and fish (SMD = 0.79), often manifesting as disrupted foraging, elevated stress responses, and altered homeostasis.[51] In soundscape contexts, such noise contributes to auditory masking, where anthropophony elevates ambient levels and obscures biophonic signals critical for interspecies communication and predator detection.[52] Empirical evidence highlights behavioral shifts in avian species, with 28% of 1,340 reviewed studies documenting noise-induced changes in song characteristics, such as increased pitch and repetition rates to counter masking in urban soundscapes.[53] For instance, chronic traffic noise near roads reduced bird abundance by approximately 25% and altered community composition by favoring species with higher-frequency vocalizations, as evidenced by playback experiments simulating "phantom roads."[52] Long-term exposure (over 15 years) to industrial noise has been linked to persistent modifications in dawn chorus timing and structure, persisting 2–4 years after noise cessation, underscoring cumulative impacts on reproductive signaling.[54] Amphibians exhibit physiological and behavioral responses, including heightened stress hormones and impaired calling efficiency; a synthesis of studies from 1990–2013 found noise from transportation sources masked advertisement calls, reducing mating success in frogs by disrupting acoustic niches within biophony.[55] In fish, boat engine noise elevates predation risk through compromised antipredator behaviors, with experimental data showing increased mortality rates in species like juvenile salmon due to masked detection of predators.[52] Community-level effects include altered predator-prey dynamics, such as relocated predators leading to decreased grasshopper and odonate abundances in noisy areas.[52] Across taxa, 51% of studies report behavioral alterations (e.g., reduced foraging efficiency in bats) and 34% physiological changes (e.g., hearing damage or immune suppression), with 79% of community-focused research indicating negative outcomes like diminished species richness.[53][52] These findings derive primarily from controlled playback experiments, establishing causality by isolating noise as the variable while controlling for confounders like visual disturbances.[51]

Limitations and Debates

Challenges in Inference and Generalization

Inferring biodiversity or ecological health from soundscape recordings presents significant challenges due to the absence of universal acoustic signatures associated with high diversity. Machine learning models trained on soundscape embeddings or acoustic indices, such as those derived from convolutional neural networks or metrics like the Acoustic Diversity Index, often achieve moderate predictive performance within specific sites (R² ranging from 0.14 to 0.50 for avian richness) but exhibit near-zero or negative cross-site transferability. [34] This stems from the lack of common features in biodiverse soundscapes; for instance, analyses of over 8,000 recordings from diverse ecosystems in the USA, Malaysia, Taiwan, and India found only four convolutional features correlating with avian richness across all datasets, with no standard soundscape indices showing consistent patterns. [34] Consequently, soundscapes serve better as indicators of relative change within monitored areas rather than absolute biodiversity metrics, requiring integration with ground-truthed surveys to avoid erroneous inferences. [34] Acoustic indices, widely used for rapid assessment, further complicate inference because they capture spectral or temporal complexity without reliably proxying underlying ecological processes. No single index comprehensively describes soundscape composition, and their calculations—often based on entropy or Gini coefficients—do not intuitively align with intuitive notions of "diversity" or "complexity," leading to misleading interpretations. [15] Non-linear relationships between index values and species richness or density, combined with masking effects from overlapping sounds (e.g., insect choruses obscuring avian signals), undermine causal claims about ecological states. [15] Indices also disproportionately reflect vocal or dominant species, underrepresenting silent taxa or those with low-amplitude calls, which biases inferences toward partial community snapshots rather than holistic biodiversity. [4] Generalization across ecosystems or regions is hindered by inherent soundscape variability driven by biome-specific assemblages, propagation conditions, and anthropogenic overlays. Assumptions embedded in indices, such as frequency bands distinguishing biophony (2–8 kHz) from anthropophony (1–2 kHz), fail in contexts where species vocalizations deviate from these norms, necessitating site-tuned parameters that preclude broad applicability. [15] Machine learning approaches, including those for urban monitoring, require retraining on local data due to differences in noise profiles and community structures, as evidenced by models like CityNet performing adequately in training cities (e.g., London) but poorly elsewhere without adaptation. [4] Temporal dynamics, such as diurnal shifts or seasonal migrations, introduce autocorrelation and pseudoreplication risks, further limiting extrapolations without extensive, context-specific validation. [15] These constraints underscore the need for standardized protocols and multi-method validation to mitigate overgeneralization in soundscape ecology applications.

Critiques of Causal Claims and Overreliance on Indices

Critics argue that soundscape ecology's reliance on acoustic indices, such as the Acoustic Complexity Index (ACI) and Acoustic Diversity Index (ADI), often overstates their utility as proxies for biodiversity metrics like species richness or functional diversity, as these indices exhibit inconsistent and habitat-specific correlations that contradict theoretical expectations.[56] For instance, a 2023 study across four global datasets found no soundscape indices consistently correlated with avian richness, with predictions failing to generalize across sites (R² < 0 in cross-dataset tests), attributing variability to non-avian sounds and habitat confounders rather than direct biotic signals.[34] Similarly, analyses in Italian habitats revealed that while some indices linked to species richness or phylogenetic diversity, functional diversity showed correlations only in urban settings, with compound indices yielding unexpected negative relationships, undermining their broad applicability without local validation.[56] Causal claims linking soundscape alterations—particularly anthropophonic intrusions—to ecological disruptions face scrutiny for neglecting underlying mechanisms and conflating correlation with causation. Soundscape research frequently overlooks causal pathways, such as biotic-abiotic interactions in sound production and propagation, leading to ambiguous interpretations where distal acoustic distributions are treated as direct ecological indicators without rigorous disentangling of confounders like topography or weather.[2] Empirical evidence shows that while soundscape shifts correlate with avian community changes (P ≤ 0.001), identical acoustic profiles can mask divergent species assemblages due to dominant non-target sounds, eroding confidence in indices as causal proxies for biodiversity loss.[34] Temporal dynamics exacerbate this, as indices derived from rapidly shifting soundscapes (e.g., due to animal movement) fail to capture static biodiversity, with short-term variability obscuring patterns like dawn choruses unless recordings exceed one hour.[15] These limitations highlight the risk of overreliance, where unvalidated indices inform policy without ground-truth calibration, potentially misdirecting conservation by prioritizing acoustic complexity over verified ecological processes. Researchers recommend site-specific testing and integration with machine learning for species identification to mitigate biases from loud species dominance and non-linear responses, emphasizing that no universal biodiverse soundscape signature exists across ecosystems.[34][15] Such critiques underscore the need for causal realism, prioritizing mechanistic models over correlative metrics to avoid erroneous generalizations in monitoring programs.[2]

Applications and Future Directions

Biodiversity Monitoring and Restoration

Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) through soundscape analysis enables non-invasive assessment of biodiversity by capturing biophonic signals from vocalizing species, such as birds, amphibians, and insects, across large spatial and temporal scales.[57] In tropical forests, for instance, deep learning models applied to soundscapes have tracked faunal community recovery post-disturbance, detecting shifts in acoustic diversity that correlate with species recolonization rates as early as one year after intervention, outperforming traditional visual surveys in hyper-diverse environments.[58] Ecoacoustic indices, derived from soundscape recordings, serve as proxies for overall biodiversity, with metrics like acoustic richness and evenness reflecting vertebrate abundance in subtropical forests, though their reliability depends on site-specific calibration to avoid overgeneralization.[59] In restoration ecology, soundscapes provide benchmarks for evaluating habitat recovery and guide targeted interventions. A 2022 framework termed "acoustic restoration" leverages baseline soundscape data from intact ecosystems to accelerate recolonization by disturbed biota, including soniferous animals and even microbial communities via trophic cascades, demonstrating scalability in deploying autonomous recording units (ARUs) across degraded sites.[60] Empirical studies using PAM have quantified restoration efficacy, such as in grasslands where acoustic metrics showed increased biophony following native plant reintroduction, with vocalizing fauna diversity rising by up to 30% within two years, attributed to reduced anthropophony and enhanced habitat structure.[61] Underground soundscapes from soil invertebrates have similarly informed restoration monitoring, revealing biodiversity dynamics in response to soil amendments, with acoustic event rates correlating to faunal biomass increases over seasonal cycles.[62] Despite these advances, applications require validation against ground-truthed data to ensure causal links between soundscape changes and biodiversity outcomes, as indices can confound biophony with geophony or noise masking.[34] Integration with machine learning enhances precision, enabling automated species identification and long-term trend analysis for adaptive management in protected areas.[27]

Recent Advances in Global and Aquatic Studies

In 2025, a comprehensive synthesis of passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) data from 168 recordings across 12 ecosystems worldwide—spanning terrestrial, freshwater, and marine realms—revealed consistent global patterns in soundscape components, with biophony peaking in biodiversity hotspots and anthropophony dominating urban-adjacent areas.[63] This analysis quantified diurnal and seasonal variations, such as elevated geophony during storms, and advocated for an integrated global PAM network to track macroecological trends and phenological shifts, building on prior indices like acoustic complexity.[64] Such efforts address data scarcity by standardizing metrics across realms, enabling cross-continental comparisons that reveal anthropophony's outsized role in masking biophony by up to 20-30 dB in industrialized regions.[65] Aquatic studies have leveraged PAM to map underwater soundscapes, particularly in marine environments where shipping and seismic activity propagate over long distances. A 2022 investigation in tropical reefs demonstrated that seawater temperature rises of 1-2°C correlate with increased snapping shrimp acoustic output, amplifying biophony by 5-10 snaps per minute and potentially altering predator-prey dynamics in climate-vulnerable habitats.[66] In urban coastal zones, 2024 research quantified how anthropogenic noise from vessels elevates sound pressure levels to 120-140 dB re 1 μPa, reducing acoustic indicator reliability for biodiversity assessment unless calibrated against species-specific thresholds.[67] Emerging AI tools have accelerated aquatic monitoring by automating bioacoustic classification in noisy datasets; for instance, machine learning models trained on 2025 marine recordings achieved 85-95% accuracy in distinguishing cetacean calls from propeller noise, facilitating real-time global-scale deployment via hydrophone arrays.[68] Systematic reviews from 2024 highlight persistent gaps in freshwater soundscape correlations with physicochemical variables, where only 15% of studies integrate hydrology data, underscoring the need for realm-specific indices to avoid overgeneralization from marine biases.[69] These advances collectively enhance predictive modeling for aquatic restoration, projecting that reduced anthropophony could restore biophonic diversity indices by 15-25% in protected zones within a decade.[17]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.