The Herald

Birds could be put at risk by traffic noise masking alarm calls, say ornitholog­ists

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TRAFFIC noise may endanger wild birds like blue tits by making it harder for them to hear alarm calls, a study suggests.

Scientists in the US tested how the sound of a busy road affected the way black-capped chickadees, which are similar to blue and great tits and tufted titmice reacted to titmouse calls warning of predators nearby.

While traffic noise from speakers set up near feeding platforms did not stop the birds looking for food, it appeared to mask the alarm calls.

Five times as many birds approached the speakers when they broadcast alarm calls on their own than when alarm calls were competing with the sound of cars and lorries.

Professor Megan Gall, from Vassar College, New York State, said: “There has been lots of work on how anthropoge­nic noise affects vocal production, but much less on the response of animals to signals in the presence of noise.

“Additional­ly, a lot of this work focuses on song, but we were interested in how noise might affect responses to an anti-predator vocalisati­on. These vocalisati­ons are evoked by the presence of a predator and so are closely linked in time with a particular stimulus.”

The findings, published in the journal The Condor: Ornitholog­ical Applicatio­ns, indicate that traffic noise may increase birds’ vulnerabil­ity to predators, say the authors.

 ??  ?? WATCH OUT: Tits could be among those affected.
WATCH OUT: Tits could be among those affected.

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