When musician and naturalist Bernie Krause drops his microphones into the 1)pristine coral reef waters of Fiji, he picks up a 2)raucous mix of sighs, beats, 3)glissandos, cries, groans, grunts, hits and clicks.
The water 4)pulsates with the sound of creatures vying for 5)acoustic bandwidth. He hears 6)crustaceans, parrot fish, 7)anemones, 8)wrasses, sharks, shrimps, puffers and 9)surgeonfish. Some 10)gnash their teeth, others use their bladders or tails to make sound. Sea anemones grunt and belch. Every creature on the reef makes its own sound.

But half a mile away, where the same reef is badly damaged, he can only pick up the sound of waves and a few snapping shrimp. It is, he says, the desolate sound of extinction.
Krause has spent 40 years recording over 15,000 species, collecting 4,500 hours of sound from many of the world’s pristine habitats.
But such is the rate of species extinction and the 11)deterioration of these pristine habitats that he estimates half his recordings are now archives, impossible to repeat because the habitats no longer exist or they have been so compromised by human noise. His tapes are possibly the only record of the original diversity of life in these places.
“A great silence is spreading over the natural world even as the sound of man is becoming 12)deafening,” he writes in a new book, The Great Animal Orchestra. “Little by little the vast orchestra of life, the chorus of the natural world, is in the process of being quieted. There has been a massive decrease in the density and diversity of key vocal creatures, both large and small. The sense of desolation extends beyond mere silence.”
Hawaii, he says, is the extinction capital of the world.“In a couple of centuries since the islands were populated by Europeans, half the 140 bird species have disappeared. In Madagascar, 15 species of 13)lemur, an elephant bird, a pygmy hippo and an estimated half of all the animals have gone extinct.”
Even partially disturbed habitats lose much of their life for many years, says Krause. Recordings of a meadow in the Sierra Nevada Mountains east of San Francisco before the surrounding forest was selectively logged in the 1980s, sounds very different to when Krause returned a year later.
“The overall richness of sound was gone, as was the thriving density and diversity of birds. The only prominent sounds were the stream and the hammering of a Williamson’s 14)sapsucker. Over the past 20 years I have returned a dozen times to the same spot at the same time of year, but the bio-acoustic vitality I had captured before logging has not yet returned.”
One in four mammals is threatened with extinction, he says. With the exception of a few sites, frog populations are in decline worldwide and birds are beginning to show radical signs of territorial shifting.

“Things are beginning to quiet down in the pristine habitats. The combination of shrinking habitats and increasing human 15)pandemonium, have produced conditions under which the channels necessary for creature survival are being completely overloaded. The voices of the wild in their purest states where no [human] noise is present are splendid symphonies.”
But the wild natural world, comprised of vast areas not managed by humans, rarely exists now except for a few isolated spots like the Alaskan wilderness, the far Canadian north, Siberia, the pampas of Argentina and Uruguay, and the Brazilian Pantanal which he says are still rich with natural sound.
“The fragile weave of natural sound is being torn apart by our seemingly boundless need to conquer the environment, rather than finding a way to abide in 16)consonance with it.”
音樂家、自然主義者伯尼·克勞斯把擴(kuò)音器放進(jìn)斐濟(jì)一片清澈的珊瑚礁海域,他聽到一陣亂哄哄的聲音:嘆息聲、拍打聲、滑音、尖叫聲、呻吟聲、呼嚕聲、撞擊聲以及滴答聲。
各種海洋生物爭相發(fā)出聲音,海水伴隨著這些聲音而跳動(dòng)。他聽到了貝類、鸚哥魚、海葵、瀨魚、鯊魚、蝦、河豚和刺尾魚發(fā)出的聲音。有些海洋生物在咬牙,還有一些在利用它們身上的囊袋和尾巴發(fā)出聲音。海葵發(fā)出咕嚕咕嚕的排氣聲。礁石里的每種生物都在發(fā)出自己的聲音。
然而,在半英里之外的同一片礁石里,他只能聽到海浪聲以及一些蝦在跳動(dòng)的聲音,這里的礁石受到了嚴(yán)重的破壞。他說,這是生物滅絕的荒涼之聲。
克勞斯花了40年的時(shí)間,走遍世界的原始生物棲息地,錄下了15000種生物的聲音,錄制的聲音長度達(dá)到4500個(gè)小時(shí)。
然而,越來越多的生物瀕臨滅絕,這些原始生物棲息地的環(huán)境也在不斷惡化,克勞斯推測,他的錄音現(xiàn)在有一半都已成為歷史,無法重現(xiàn),因?yàn)檫@些棲息地或已不復(fù)存在,或已被人類制造出來的噪聲所侵?jǐn)_。他的錄音可能是記錄下這些地方的原始生物多樣性的唯一資料。
“隨著人類的聲音愈發(fā)震耳欲聾,自然界卻逐漸變得一片死寂。”他在其新書《美妙的動(dòng)物管弦樂團(tuán)》中如此寫道。“生命管弦樂團(tuán),自然界的大合唱正在一點(diǎn)一點(diǎn)地消失。動(dòng)物主唱們的數(shù)量和種類已急劇下降,大型動(dòng)物和小型動(dòng)物皆是如此。這種荒涼感不僅僅是因?yàn)槌良拧!?/p>
夏威夷,他說,是世界上生物滅絕最嚴(yán)重的地方。……