MOST 105-2621-B-005-004-
http://ipt.taibif.tw/resource?r=20190117
The Impact of Anthropogenic noise on the acoustic behavior of cricket species
Jeng-Tze
Yang
Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan
professor of Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University
402 No.145, Xingda Road, Taichung City, Taiwan
Taichung
Taiwan
402
TW
+886-4-22854667
jtyang@dragon.nchu.edu.tw
Jeng-Tze
Yang
Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan
professor of Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University
402 No.145, Xingda Road, Taichung City, Taiwan
Taichung
Taiwan
402
TW
+886-4-22854667
jtyang@dragon.nchu.edu.tw
Jeng-Tze
Yang
Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan
professor of Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University
402 No.145, Xingda Road, Taichung City, Taiwan
Taichung
Taiwan
402
TW
+886-4-22854667
jtyang@dragon.nchu.edu.tw
principalInvestigator
2020-05-23
chi
Sound Data of Gryllus bimaculatus De Geer, from Master Thesis of Pei-Qi Chen, NCHU, Taiwan. Supported by project "The Impact of Anthropogenic noise on the acoustic behavior of cricket species", the PI of the project is Dr. Jeng-Tze Yang of Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan.
Gryllus bimaculatus
calling sound
sound frequency
GBIF Dataset Type Vocabulary: http://rs.gbif.org/vocabulary/gbif/dataset_type.xml
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0 License.
Taiwan
119
123
25.5
21
unkown
Jeng-Tze
Yang
Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan
professor of Department of Entomology, National Chung-Hsing University
402 No.145, Xingda Road, Taichung City, Taiwan
Taichung
Taiwan
402
TW
+886-4-22854667
jtyang@dragon.nchu.edu.tw
The Impact of Anthropogenic noise on the acoustic behavior of cricket species
Pei-Qi
Chen
metadataProvider
Soundscape, combined with physical environment sound (geophony), organism sound (biophony),
and human sound (anthrophony), is a hot issue these years. Anthrophony sometimes was recognized as
sound pollution that not only causes physical and physiological problems to human, but also affects the
community of animals use acoustic signals. By the end of 2012, most researches emphasize on the
impact of anthropogenic noise on vertebrate animals, only two of the 83 papers considered insect
species. However, insects can detect sound nearly any segment of the body to frequency between 10 Hz
to over 100 kHz. Furthermore, insects use sounds below 10 kHz to communicate, it’s no doubt that
insects would be suffered from anthropogenic noise. In our research, we investigated the response of
male field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus De Geer (1773), to ambient anthropogenic noise decibel. By
using sound recorders and decibel meters, compare acoustic characters of calling sound with ambient
anthropogenic noise level. Moreover, we will sort out the big data of crickets’ sound audio files, which
were collected from 1987, to establish database.
Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan
Taiwan
2019-01-17T04:23:29.197+08:00
dataset
http://ipt.taibif.tw/resource?id=20190117/v1.1.xml