SSS 2012-02-29(在线收听

 This is Scientific American 60 Second Science, I am Mariette DiChristina. Got a minute?

 
Maybe you've heard that sound. It's an Orca, a killer whale. We know that whales have a kind of language. Families and closely related groups even share dialects.
 
Are they letting members of the pod know where the food is, crooning a romantic ballad to a potential mate, or something else altogether? That's what researchers want to know--and where citizen scientists come in.
 
The first step in understanding whale talk is cataloging the calls. You might organize your messy drawer by matching up the socks--at our website, citizen scientists can match up the whale calls. You listen to an uncategorized call, then find one that it sounds like it [similar sound].
 
So far, more than 5,000 volunteers have matched 100,000 calls. That effort would have taken professionals years. The data will help answer questions like: How many kinds of calls do whales make? And: What does the number of calls say about intelligence? The studies will also help researchers develop guidelines to reduce the impact of man-made sounds on marine life. To lend us your ears, just go to whale.scientificamerican.com
 
Thanks for the minute for Scientific American, I'm Mariette DiChristina.
  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/sasss/2012/2/172988.html