LES (@lesgoodyer) 's Twitter Profile
LES

@lesgoodyer

Birder, ex bird
ringer, Natural History, Wildlife sound recording, lover of wood, moths and member of British Primitive Goat Research Group. Vibroscape nerd.

ID: 950328223

calendar_today15-11-2012 19:21:33

524 Tweet

254 Followers

442 Following

David Haskell (@dghaskell) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We live surrounded by hidden songs. I recorded this with a contact mic on a fireweed: chuckles and whines of leafhoppers, and the footsteps of a young shield bug. These sounds are inaudible in air. The leafhoppers shoot their song into the leaf from abdominal buzzers. 1/3

earth.fm ✨ (@earth_fm_live) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The first form of communication was not language but vibration. Listen to an audio essay featuring the biologist Juan José López and sound artist Ludwig Berger who sonify species that soon threatens to become completely extinct - if we don't listen." soundcloud.com/norient/a-huge…

Alan Dalton (@blogbirder) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Wild Bird Acoustics will drop its fourth episode this Tuesday at 06.00am CET. Another audio filled show. Available at all major podcast providers. Episodes 1-3 are now live for those with an interest in bird vocalizations. Please feel free to share!

Insect Science (@insect_science) 's Twitter Profile Photo

📢This new #OpenAccess study challenges the hypothesis of psyllids generating #vibrational signals through stridulation, providing evidence of simple wing buzzing instead. #video #communication 👉rebrand.ly/1110ce Jernej Polajnar Adam W. Harley

📢This new #OpenAccess study challenges the hypothesis of psyllids generating #vibrational signals through stridulation, providing evidence of simple wing buzzing instead. #video #communication
👉rebrand.ly/1110ce
<a href="/JPolajnar/">Jernej Polajnar</a> <a href="/AdamWHarley/">Adam W. Harley</a>
Tessa Rhinehart (@tessarhinehart) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Forest Tuba, a #Bioacoustic Mystery: Kitzes Lab at University of Pittsburgh found this sound in autonomous recordings (NE US forests, May/June). bit.ly/forest-tuba We don't know what made it; our best guess is treehopper vibrational communication Can you or someone you know ID it? Please share!

Irish Wildlife Sounds (Seán Ronayne) (@soundsirish) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Exploring the sounds of the soil with a contact microphone, a butter knife and a clothes peg. Amazingly, many creatures down there communicate through vibration and this will hopefully intercept some unusual sounding chats! 🪱🪲🐜

Exploring the sounds of the soil  with a contact microphone, a butter knife and a clothes peg. Amazingly, many creatures down there communicate through vibration and this will hopefully intercept some unusual sounding chats! 🪱🪲🐜
Carlos Abrahams (@abr_eco) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hi #ecoacoustic twitter. We @bakerconsultant have a bunch of Wildlife Acoustics Song Meter SM2s that we no longer use - bat and acoustic models. With microphones and some long (50m) cables. Free to a good home, if anyone would like them. Give me a shout for more details.

Hi #ecoacoustic twitter.  We @bakerconsultant have a bunch of <a href="/WildlifeAcoust/">Wildlife Acoustics</a> Song Meter SM2s that we no longer use - bat and acoustic models.  With microphones and some long (50m) cables. Free to a good home, if anyone would like them.  Give me a shout for more details.
Ross Piper (@drrosspiper) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm helping the BBC with a new landmark series on terrestrial invertebrates. If there are any fascinating stories you know of or that you're working on, please get in touch. Pls RT.