Sensitivity beyond human range may have conservation implications
Date: March 22, 2016
Source: Zoological Society of San
Diego
A study published in the journal Global Ecology and Conservation may
help field conservationists better understand the potential for human
activities to disturb endangered giant pandas in native habitats. Using pandas
located at the San Diego Zoo, conservation scientists worked with animal care
specialists to determine pandas' range of hearing sensitivity, discovering that
they can detect sound into the ultrasonic range. Because giant pandas depend in
large part on information transmitted through vocalizations for reproductive
success, noise from human activities in or near forest areas could be
disruptive.
"An understanding of a species' hearing provides a foundation for
developing estimates of noise disturbance," said Megan Owen, associate
director of giant panda conservation, San Diego Zoo Global. "For the giant
panda, vocalizations are typically emitted in proximity to conspecifics
(members of the same species), however the ability to discriminate between
fine-scale differences in vocalizations is important for successful
reproduction; and so, a thorough understanding of acoustic ecology is merited
in order to estimate the potential for disturbance.
"In order to learn about panda hearing, researchers at the San
Diego Zoo worked with giant pandas to teach them to respond, if they could hear
sounds at a particular pitch and loudness, thus communicating their ability to
hear across the acoustic spectrum," Owen said.
"Through this study, the pandas at the San Diego Zoo have made a
significant contribution to our understanding of what may be affecting panda
reproduction in habitats in China," said Ron Swaisgood, director of
applied animal ecology, San Diego Zoo Global. "It is only because of the
strong relationship that animal care staff have with the bears at the Zoo that
we have been able to gather this information."
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