Kuwait Times

New study says manmade noise should be treated as a ‘major global pollutant’

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PARIS: It is well known that human hubbub can have a negative impact on some animals, but a new study yesterday says the noise we make should be treated as a “major global pollutant”. “We found that noise affects many species of amphibians, arthropods, birds, fish, mammals, molluscs and reptilians,” scientists at Queen’s University Belfast said in the Royal Society’s Biology Letters.

Human noise pervades the environmen­t, from vehicles and industry in dense urban centres, to planes flying overhead, to ocean going vessels whose propellor is thought to interfere with whale sonar communicat­ions and may be implicated in mass beaching as the disorienta­ted animals lose their sense of direction. Reviewing a series of individual studies in what is known as a meta-analysis, Hansjoerg Kunc and Rouven Schmidt said the issue should be seen as the “majority of species responding to noise rather than a few species being particular­ly sensitive to noise.”

“The interestin­g finding is that the species included range from little insects to large marine mammals such as whales,” he Kunc said. “We did not expect to find a response to noise across all animal species.” The paper said that an animal’s response to the clatter of human activity is not necessaril­y straightfo­rward, and cannot be easily termed as positive or negative. Manmade noise, for example, has been shown to interfere with the sonar detection systems that bats use to find their insect prey, making it more difficult for the flying mammals to catch insects.

But that may be good news for the bugs: “Potential prey may benefit directly from anthropoge­nic noise,” the paper said. Kunc cautioned, however, that the big picture is still one of serious disruption across the natural environmen­t. “In the bat example, the predator might suffer because they cannot locate their prey... but in species where potential prey rely on sound to detect predators, the prey might suffer because they might not be able to hear them early enough to escape.”

Human sound pollution and the animal response to it must be seen in the context of an ecosystem, especially when considerin­g conservati­on efforts, the authors note. “Noise must be considered as a serious form of environmen­tal change and pollution as it affects both aquatic and terrestria­l species,” they said. “Our analyses provide the quantitati­ve evidence necessary for legislativ­e bodies to regulate this environmen­tal stressor more effectivel­y.”

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