Friday, February 22, 2019

"White-tailed deer feeding habits shape the acoustic properties of their forest habitat, potentially affecting the vocal communication of understory-dwelling songbirds and other species, according to a Vassar College study conducted June 10-16, 2015"............."Heavily-forested areas tend to reverberate and scatter sound more easily than open space, and thus the sound transmission is a crucial component of communication for species including songbirds"............."The site of the research was the Vassar College Farm and Ecological Preserve, a 527-acre preserve surrounded by a suburban residential matrix in Poughkeepsie, New York".............."The habitat is primarily mixed deciduous forest(oak, ash, maple), interspersed with coniferous tree(White Pine, Hemlock, etc) species"............."At the time of the study the deer population density at the site was estimated to be between 19 and 21 animals per square mile"............ "Deer density of this magnitude has previously been shown to have a significant impact on both vegetation structure and avian communities, such as reduced understory vegetation diversity and abundance and decline in forest-songbird species dependent on understory vegetation"........."The findings suggests that songbird vocalizations might be more effective and transmit information more clearly, to both intended receivers and unintended receivers such as predators, in deer-browsed environments"

https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=https://phys.org/news/2019-02-white-tailed-deer-acoustic-properties-forest.html&ct=ga&cd=CAEYACoTOTc1MDk5NDEwMTc0MTUyOTI2NTIaZmMyNWRjZGYxNDI0NmQ5MTpjb206ZW46VVM&usg=AFQjCNEfkyjpU86tNnO_ajubmGRiXiWmJw

White-tailed deer shape acoustic properties of their forest habitat


February 13, 2019, Public Library of Science

White-tailed deer feeding habits shape the acoustic properties of their forest habitat, potentially affecting the vocal communication of understory-dwelling songbirds and other species, according to a study published February 13, 2019 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Timothy J. Boycott from Vassar College and colleagues.

Doe and her fawns at Vassar College Farm and Ecological Preserve-site of Study













White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) populations are on the rise throughout North America. Their feeding habits (browsing) directly shape their —primarily by reducing the abundance and diversity of understory shrubs and trees. Heavily-forested areas tend to reverberate and scatter  more easily than open space, and thus the sound transmission is a crucial component of communication for species including songbirds.

Site of Acoustic Study-Poughkeepsie, NY













To determine the effect of deer browsing on sound transmission, the researchers played recorded sounds representing songbird tones and trills, as well as , in paired plots that were either fenced off to exclude deer or left open to deer as normal. To compare acoustic differences between the plots, the authors examined the fidelity, amplitude, and attenuation of the sounds across the plots.

Credit: CC0 Public Domain









The deer-browsed plots had significantly greater sound fidelity than the deer-excluded plots, though there was no  in amplitude, which the authors attributed to the reduced density of understory vegetation in the deer-browsed plots. The finding suggests that songbird vocalizations might be more effective and transmit information more clearly, to both intended receivers and unintended receivers such as predators, in deer-browsed environments.
This study examined sound transmission over distances of 11m or less so future studies examining songbird vocalizations across longer distances and with different levels of deer browsing may be needed. Nonetheless, these results suggest that white-tailed deer browsing in forests could have acoustic as well as ecological effects.












Gall adds: "While we know quite a lot about the effects of deer browsing on vegetation and we know quite a lot about the effects of vegetation on sound propagation, the two had never been linked. Here we're looking beyond traditional deer browsing ecology and asking how  might be influencing the communication space for animals."
More information: Boycott TJ, Gao J, Gall MD (2019) Deer browsing alters sound propagation in temperate deciduous forests. PLoS ONE 14(2): e0211569. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211569

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