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      The use of acoustic indices to determine avian species richness in audio-recordings of the environment

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      Ecological Informatics
      Elsevier BV

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          Soundscape Ecology: The Science of Sound in the Landscape

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            Rapid Acoustic Survey for Biodiversity Appraisal

            Biodiversity assessment remains one of the most difficult challenges encountered by ecologists and conservation biologists. This task is becoming even more urgent with the current increase of habitat loss. Many methods–from rapid biodiversity assessments (RBA) to all-taxa biodiversity inventories (ATBI)–have been developed for decades to estimate local species richness. However, these methods are costly and invasive. Several animals–birds, mammals, amphibians, fishes and arthropods–produce sounds when moving, communicating or sensing their environment. Here we propose a new concept and method to describe biodiversity. We suggest to forego species or morphospecies identification used by ATBI and RBA respectively but rather to tackle the problem at another evolutionary unit, the community level. We also propose that a part of diversity can be estimated and compared through a rapid acoustic analysis of the sound produced by animal communities. We produced α and β diversity indexes that we first tested with 540 simulated acoustic communities. The α index, which measures acoustic entropy, shows a logarithmic correlation with the number of species within the acoustic community. The β index, which estimates both temporal and spectral dissimilarities, is linearly linked to the number of unshared species between acoustic communities. We then applied both indexes to two closely spaced Tanzanian dry lowland coastal forests. Indexes reveal for this small sample a lower acoustic diversity for the most disturbed forest and acoustic dissimilarities between the two forests suggest that degradation could have significantly decreased and modified community composition. Our results demonstrate for the first time that an indicator of biological diversity can be reliably obtained in a non-invasive way and with a limited sampling effort. This new approach may facilitate the appraisal of animal diversity at large spatial and temporal scales.
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              What is soundscape ecology? An introduction and overview of an emerging new science

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecological Informatics
                Ecological Informatics
                Elsevier BV
                15749541
                May 2014
                May 2014
                : 21
                :
                : 110-119
                Article
                10.1016/j.ecoinf.2013.11.007
                b232a13d-904f-4170-b8c8-0655485cadf9
                © 2014
                History

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