If we listen closely, a bird’s call reflects what humans have done to its landscape, and a forest soundscape tells us about habitat health. Listen to the third episode of Wild Frequencies to learn how scientists use bioacoustics to understand animals in a landscape altered by humans.
Wild Frequencies is a three-part mini-series by Mongabay-India, where wildlife researchers from India share their stories of sounds from the animal world. They decode those wild frequencies for us, one song, one howl, and one chirp at a time.
Follow Everything Environment by Mongabay India for more episodes.
For show notes, visit our website.
Guests:
TR Shankar Raman, scientist, Nature Conservation Foundation
Divya Mudappa, scientist, Nature Conservation Foundation
Vijay Ramesh, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Priyanka Hariharan, ecologist, University of Florida
K.S. Gopi Sundar, conservation biologist
Reported and written by Shreya Dasgupta and Kartik Chandramouli
Editing, music, and sound design by Abhijit Shylanath
Episode artwork by Hitesh Sonar
Recordings from Valparai by Vijay Ramesh at the K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, and Project Dhvani, Meghana Srivathsa, Akshay Anand, Shankar Raman and Divya Mudappa. Recordings of sarus crane calls by Suhridam Roy.