A new study has found that whale songs can act as a barometer for the effects of climate change on ocean ecosystems.
What better way to track whales than listening in on them? Passive acoustic monitoring, in which microphones are placed ...
“One big difference is that whales are often traveling thousands of miles across ocean basins–great whales undertake the ...
A study reveals that whales vocalise less during marine heatwaves to kill their prey, linking climate change to changes in ...
With the coming of spring, birds are more vocal – seeking mates and defending their territory. At the University of Virginia, ...
Playwright Abe Koogler’s portrait of a group of Pacific Northwesterners is rich, funny and devastating, with a cast that’s a ...
One of the most wonderful things about spearfishing, free diving, or generally just being in the ocean are the sounds of the ...
Whales sense their surroundings largely through sound and create complex vocalizations, or songs, when they’re searching for mates and food. Scientists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research ...
Analysis of sound recordings is a highly effective way to study whales because we can hear them from quite far away. If a whale sings anywhere within thousands of square kilometres around the ...
A recent study by Stony Brook University postdoctoral fellow Mason Youngblood revealed the complex efficiency of whale ...