Oct 1st, 2018
Members of the BComm class of 1961 gathered Wednesday for an event recognizing their support for the Odette School of Business.
Members of the BComm class of 1961 gathered Wednesday for an event recognizing their support for the Odette School of Business.
Many animals communicate using sound to attract mates, find food, and avoid predators.
Dave Wilson, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Windsor, says that rising levels of human-generated noise have raised concern for those animals. He is a member of a team of researchers who have published a new study this week in the Journal of Experimental Biology, which shows that traffic noise causes red-winged blackbirds to alter their songs.