27 min

Birds: singing for survival Discovery

    • Science

As large areas of the world have locked down this year, many of us have become more aware of the birdsong around us. The relative silence has allowed us to listen in. But scientists have known for several years that the birds themselves have been responding to human noise too, by pitching their songs and other calls higher, to be heard over the rumble of our urban life.
There are several ways in which birds can adapt how they communicate in the face of environmental pressures, but what are the limits to these adaptations? And what can this tell us about how to maximise conservation efforts in the future? Rory Crawford talks to ornithologists and animal behaviourists studying bird species around the world. He finds out how the advance of technology is helping researchers explore birds’ preferences and behaviours in the wild, and hears how one particular bird changed its song, and the new version rapidly spread across North America – “the most viral tweet of all time”, as it’s been called!
Picture: A Robin [Erithacus rubecula], Credit: Gary Chalker/Getty Images

As large areas of the world have locked down this year, many of us have become more aware of the birdsong around us. The relative silence has allowed us to listen in. But scientists have known for several years that the birds themselves have been responding to human noise too, by pitching their songs and other calls higher, to be heard over the rumble of our urban life.
There are several ways in which birds can adapt how they communicate in the face of environmental pressures, but what are the limits to these adaptations? And what can this tell us about how to maximise conservation efforts in the future? Rory Crawford talks to ornithologists and animal behaviourists studying bird species around the world. He finds out how the advance of technology is helping researchers explore birds’ preferences and behaviours in the wild, and hears how one particular bird changed its song, and the new version rapidly spread across North America – “the most viral tweet of all time”, as it’s been called!
Picture: A Robin [Erithacus rubecula], Credit: Gary Chalker/Getty Images

27 min

Top Podcasts In Science

Making Sense with Sam Harris
Sam Harris
BBC Inside Science
BBC Radio 4
Mind Body Health & Politics
Richard L. Miller
Голый землекоп
libo/libo
NASA's Curious Universe
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
New Scientist Podcasts
New Scientist

More by BBC

6 Minute English
BBC Radio
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
Just One Thing - with Michael Mosley
BBC Radio 4
Learning English Vocabulary
BBC Radio
Learning English Conversations
BBC Radio
The Listening Service
BBC Radio 3