These soundscapes, the authors argue, are not passive backdrops but dynamic systems where silence can signal biodiversity loss, and noise pollution disrupts critical interactions like predator warnings or mating rituals. The book's strength lies in its interdisciplinary approach, weaving ecology, marine biology, and psychology to show how human-generated noise-from shipping to urban sprawl-alters habitats irreversibly.
Chapters progress from analyzing animal adaptations in contrasting environments to documenting noise's cascading effects, such as whales struggling to navigate amid sonar interference. Unique historical recordings of vanished ecosystems underscore the urgency of acoustic conservation. Unlike typical noise pollution studies, Quiet or Loud juxtaposes extremes, illustrating universal principles through examples like Chernobyl's post-disaster silence or insects' sonic mimicry.
Accessible yet rigorous, it balances fieldwork with actionable solutions, making a compelling case that preserving soundscapes is key to safeguarding biodiversity-and redefining stewardship as an act of listening.
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