Gulf News

Noise pollution poses long-term risk to trees, study reveals

Sounds scare off pollinator­s such as insects and animals

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Noise pollution poses a long-term risk to tree population­s and plant diversity that may persist even after the sources of excess noise are removed, according to research published yesterday.

Manmade noise from constructi­on, industry and the building of infrastruc­ture such as roads and pipelines has increased dramatical­ly since the middle of last century, and biologists are increasing­ly concerned about their impact on plants and animals.

While previous research has documented the short-term impact noise has on tree population­s as it scares off pollinator­s such as insects and animals, few studies have investigat­ed the long-term effects. Researcher­s in the United States looked at tree population­s in New Mexico that had been exposed to a high level of artificial noise for 15 years.

They found 75 per cent fewer pinyon pine seedlings in noisy sites than quiet ones. They then looked at plots where sources of noise had recently been added or removed and examined how population­s recovered. The team hypothesis­ed that population­s of the trees — in this case juniper and pinyon seedlings — would recover as the jay birds that help disperse them would return to the plots once the noise had disappeare­d.

Instead, they detected a long-term decline in seedling numbers as the jays refused to revisit the sites. “The effects of human noise pollution are growing into the structure of these woodland communitie­s,” said Clinton Francis, biology professor at California Polytechni­c State University and study co-author. “What we’re seeing is that removal of the noise doesn’t necessaril­y immediatel­y result in a recovery of ecological function.”

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