Abstract
Decades of research demonstrate that roads impact wildlife and suggest traffic noise as a primary cause of population declines near roads. We created a "phantom road" using an array of speakers to apply traffic noise to a roadless landscape, directly testing the effect of noise alone on an entire songbird community during autumn migration. Thirty-one percent of the bird community avoided the phantom road. For individuals that stayed despite the noise, overall body condition decreased by a full SD and some species showed a change in ability to gain body condition when exposed to traffic noise during migratory stopover. We conducted complementary laboratory experiments that implicate foraging-vigilance behavior as one mechanism driving this pattern. Our results suggest that noise degrades habitat that is otherwise suitable, and that the presence of a species does not indicate the absence of an impact.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 12105-9 |
| Number of pages | 5 |
| Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
| Volume | 112 |
| Issue number | 39 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 29 Sep 2015 |
Keywords
- traffic noise pollution
- songbird migration
- habitat degradation
- foraging-vigilance trade-off
- perceived predation risk
EGS Disciplines
- Biology