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Bearded seals are loud – but not loud enough

Cornell University Listen to bearded seal vocalizations, sometimes described as “otherworldly.” These loud calls are essential to bearded seals’ reproduction, but rising industrial noise in the Arctic could have them struggling to be heard. Bearded seals are loud – but not loud enough February 24, 2021 During mating season, male bearded seals make loud calls to attract a mate. How loud? Well, even their “quiet” call can still be as ear-rattling as a chainsaw. These elaborate vocalizations are essential for bearded seal reproduction, and have to be loud enough to be heard over the cacophony of their equally loud brethren . But in the rapidly changing Arctic soundscape, where noise from industrial activities is predicted to dramatically increase in the next 15 years, bearded seals may need to adjust their calling behavior if they are going to be heard above the noise generated by ships and commercial activities.

Bearded seals are loud - but not loud enough

 E-Mail ITHACA, N.Y. - During mating season, male bearded seals make loud calls to attract a mate. How loud? Well, even their quiet call can still be as ear-rattling as a chainsaw. These elaborate vocalizations are essential for bearded seal reproduction, and have to be loud enough to be heard over the cacophony of their equally loud brethren. But in the rapidly changing Arctic soundscape, where noise from industrial activities is predicted to dramatically increase in the next 15 years, bearded seals may need to adjust their calling behavior if they are going to be heard above the noise generated by ships and commercial activities.

The enduring mystery of Critchfield s spruce

This article originally appeared on Undark. The first and only time Steve Jackson spoke to Bill Critchfield was in the late 1980s. Critchfield, an authority on the conifers of North America, was at home recovering from a heart attack. Jackson, then a postdoctoral researcher at Brown University, had called looking for advice on how to tell jack pine from Virginia pine. Jackson was also curious about something the elder botanist had mentioned in a recent paper: mysterious spruce fossils from the American Southeast. The fossils dated to the end of the Pleistocene ice age, about 18,000 years ago, and had been found across the region, including in Louisiana s Tunica Hills. Scientists had usually identified the fossils as white spruce, a species that now lives far to the north, but they d been arguing for decades about what its presence said about the region s ice age climate. Some held that white spruce pointed to a climate similar to modern Canada or Alaska. Others argued that the cli

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