Has Nature Gotten Louder During the Pandemic?
According to Chris Watson, the man behind your favorite wildlife soundtracks, we're just becoming better listeners
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Bearded seals sound like opera singers beneath the waves. Shrimp听crackle. Elephants slurp when they drink through their trunks. Dry grass can sing. An iceberg splits with the same yawning creak as a tree beginning its fall to earth.
This is the world according to Chris Watson. If you鈥檝e ever watched a David Attenborough鈥搉arrated documentary鈥攁 by this point鈥攖hen you鈥檝e heard sounds captured by Watson. The 66-year-old has helped provide the aural background for almost every film fronted by Attenborough since 1998, from and ,听to both series of , to , the BBC鈥檚 upcoming documentary on plant life,听set for release in 2022.
And while the world has changed a lot this year, Watson鈥檚 listening habits haven鈥檛. When I reached him at his home in the suburbs of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in northeast England this听spring, he was reveling in the newfound quiet the pandemic had brought on.
Watson lives a few miles from the highway and local airport, but the usual din of engine noise had fallen away. This had him getting up at obscenely early hours to record the dawn chorus of birds. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a sort of voyage of rediscovery, because I鈥檝e been using similar techniques that I use in the tropical rainforest and the desert to get recordings in my back garden,鈥 he told me.
Since the coronavirus began, many people have expressed wonder and delight at hearing the in densely populated areas. 鈥淥ne good thing about noise, unlike lots of other forms of pollution, is that when it stops, the problem goes away instantly,鈥 says Watson. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the very rapid transition we鈥檝e experienced with this lockdown.鈥 In April听he noticed that a blackbird in his back garden seemed to be singing longer and more vigorously than usual. Watson soon surmised that the males were singing their hearts out because they could suddenly hear how many rivals they had nearby听and thus had to get more creative to compete. The song wasn鈥檛 actually louder than before, but it was more varied.
Watson believes that we all have the capacity to hear these kinds of differences in nature, if only we remember how to listen. 鈥淲e鈥檝e evolved from good listeners鈥攖hat鈥檚 how we survived,鈥 he says.听鈥淚t used to be that what we heard and how we reacted to it was a matter of life and death.鈥 In our modern lives, however, we鈥檝e been conditioned to do practically the opposite: to block out sound simply to get through the day. 鈥淲e go into buildings with dreadful acoustic design, we鈥檙e in public spaces where we can鈥檛 have a conversation, we鈥檙e in open-floor-plan offices where we can鈥檛 hear ourselves think,鈥 Watson explains.
Now, though, due to the pandemic, even those of us in urban environments find ourselves with a precious and fleeting opportunity to hear the sounds that the other inhabitants of the planet are making. And if we have just a little bit of Chris Watson in us, once we start listening, we鈥檒l never stop.