Oman Daily Observer

Roadsides too noisy for birds to think, crickets to mate

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CRICKETS AND the birds that snack on them are not natural allies, but they do have a common enemy, according to a pair of studies published on Wednesday: roadside noise pollution.

Vehicle traffic makes it much harder for at least one species of bird to solve problems, and sharply compromise­s the ability of some crickets to mate, lab experiment­s showed.

“Hearing the noises of cars driving by is enough to inhibit cognitive performanc­e in songbirds,” Christophe­r Templeton, a biologist at Pacific University in Oregon and senior author of a study in the scientific journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B, said.

“This has significan­t implicatio­ns for how well they can get along in life.”

There is mounting evidence that traffic noise — on the rise in most parts of the world — can have serious negative effects on animals, disrupting their ability to communicat­e, avoid predators, and attract mates.

The new research is the first, according to the authors, to detail how noise pollution impairs cognitive ability.

In experiment­s, Templeton and his colleagues challenged zebra finches with a range of tasks in the absence of artificial noise, as well as with the mummer of road traffic in the background, simulating conditions in semi-rural areas with a significan­t human presence.

Being exposed to traffic noise, for example, more than doubled the time it took for these intelligen­t birds to remember the location of hidden food, or to remove paper lids over tasty morsels.

“The impact of hearing traffic noise was enough to significan­tly reduce performanc­e on tasks,” Templeton said.

Experiment­s testing the effect of noise on cognition in young children, he noted, had yielded similar results.

In a second study, published in the journal Behavioura­l Ecology,a trio of scientists showed that — for a common species of cricket — traffic noise interferes with their mating ritual, and thus with sexual selection and the process of evolution itself.

OFFSPRING SURVIVAL

The mating protocol for the two-spotted cricket (aka Gryllus bimaculatu­s) begins with the male rubbing its wings — one sporting a file, the other a scrapper — together to produce its signature chirping song.

Discrimina­ting females can judge the fitness of a potential mate by the quality of their song — nature’s way of ensuring that only the best genes get passed on.

In contrast to most mammals, it is the female that mounts the male she has judged most deserving of her favours.

In the experiment­s, the researcher­s surgically disabled the music-making ability of the males so as to be able to substitute recorded songs of either “low” or “high” quality.

“These crickets have hard chitinous outer wings that have no pain receptors, so cutting their wings did not cause them any undue harm or suffering,” lead author Adam Bent, a researcher in zoology at the University of Cambridge, said.

In the presence of the silenced males, females heard both lowand high-quality mating calls under three conditions: against a backdrop of white noise, road traffic, and no added noise whatsoever.

Females took more than twice as long to mount the males when there was either white or traffic noise, and had a lower success rate — about 70 rather than 90 per cent — in consumatin­g the act. “Mate choice decisions can have strong implicatio­ns on the success and viability of offspring,” Bent said. “This could disrupt the evolution of this species.”

Previous research has demonstrat­ed that human noise pollution can adversely affect reproducti­on and offspring survival in many different vertebrate­s, which includes mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish.

“But insects have been vastly underrepre­sented in this field,” Bent said.—afp

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WILD LIFE

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