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Kurt M. Fristrup

Researcher at National Park Service

Publications -  89
Citations -  4880

Kurt M. Fristrup is an academic researcher from National Park Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Noise & Soundscape. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 84 publications receiving 4041 citations. Previous affiliations of Kurt M. Fristrup include Cornell University & Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

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The costs of chronic noise exposure for terrestrial organisms

TL;DR: A broad range of findings that indicate the potential severity of this threat to diverse taxa, and recent studies that document substantial changes in foraging and anti-predator behavior, reproductive success, density and community structure in response to noise are reviewed.
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A synthesis of two decades of research documenting the effects of noise on wildlife

TL;DR: A systematic and standardised review of the scientific literature published from 1990 to 2013 on the effects of anthropogenic noise on wildlife, including both terrestrial and aquatic studies shows that terrestrial wildlife responses begin at noise levels of approximately 40’dBA, and 20% of papers documented impacts below 50 dBA.
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Measuring acoustic habitats

TL;DR: The signal processing techniques needed to produce calibrated measurements of terrestrial and aquatic acoustic habitats are reviewed and a supplemental tutorial and template computer codes in matlab and r are included, which give detailed guidance on how to production calibrated spectrograms and statistical analyses of sound levels.
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Passive Localization of Calling Animals and Sensing of their Acoustic Environment Using Acoustic Tomography

TL;DR: Studies in ecology, behavior, and conservation could be significantly enhanced by using acoustic tomography, especially when monitored by several acoustic receivers.
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Noise pollution is pervasive in U.S. protected areas.

TL;DR: Noise pollution in protected areas is closely linked with transportation, development, and extractive land use, providing insight into where mitigation efforts can be most effective, and indicates that noise pollution in Protected Areas with more stringent regulations had less anthropogenic noise.