Hello there! My name is Juan and I am a PhD student at the National Institute of Biology (Slovenia). My field is #Biotremology, or the study of communication in animals by substrate-borne vibrations. In my case, I study hay-meadow habitats and their #vibroscape

Here is our paper on vibroscapes:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2022.828503/full

And a little explanation video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Naugnzw9hbE

Some vibroscapes examples to listen:
https://soundcloud.com/tremoneta

Hope to meet many scientists here!

Is It Time for Ecotremology?

Our awareness of air-borne sounds in natural and urban habitats has led to the recent recognition of soundscape ecology and ecoacoustics as interdisciplinary fields of research that can help us better understand ecological processes and ecosystem dynamics. Because the vibroscape (i.e., the substrate-borne vibrations occurring in a given environment) is hidden to the human senses, we have largely overlooked its ecological significance. Substrate vibrations provide information crucial to the reproduction and survival of most animals, especially arthropods, which are essential to ecosystem functioning. Thus, vibroscape is an important component of the environment perceived by the majority of animals. Nowadays, when the environment is rapidly changing due to human activities, climate change, and invasive species, this hidden vibratory world is also likely to change without our notice, with potentially crucial effects on arthropod communities. Here, we introduce ecotremology, a discipline that mainly aims at studying substrate-borne vibrations for unraveling ecological processes and biological conservation. As biotremology follows the main research concepts of bioacoustics, ecotremology is consistent with the paradigms of ecoacoustics. We argue that information extracted from substrate vibrations present in the environment can be used to comprehensively assess and reliably predict ecosystem changes. We identify key research questions and discuss the technical challenges associa...

Frontiers
@tremoneta it’s not even 8 o’clock and I’ve already learned about a field of science whose existence I never suspected. Now I wonder if insects think a highway is like a 24-hour death-metal concert.
@Virginicus not only the highway, but some km afar from it even. Cars, trains, sometimes planes... don't even want to think in a city. A different understanding of "noise pollution", but this one we were not aware off yet. They are tho, their activity calling each other is quite reduced when they can't "hear" each other. I guess they don't like death-metal that much