Special soundscape-focused issue of Park Science magazine
Bioacoustics, Effects of Noise on Wildlife, Science, Wildlands Add commentsThis came out in December, but I forgot to post about it then. The National Park Service’s science magazine has published an entire issue devoted to the NPS’s soundscape studies and programs.

A couple strolls through Cathedral Grove on a quiet morning in winter when visitation is typically low. Signage at the entrance to this area reminds visitors that they are in a quiet zone. (NPS Photo/Lou Sian)
Articles include:
- Measuring and monitoring soundscapes in the national parks
- Integrating soundscapes into NPS planning
- Conserving the wild life therein–Protecting park fauna from anthropogenic noise
- Soundscapes monitoring and an overflight advisory group: Informing real-time management decisions at Denali
- Soundscape management at Grand Canyon National Park
- Generator noise along the US-Mexico border
- A program of research to support management of visitor-caused noise at Muir Woods National Monument
And, as they say, much, much more! See the issue online here; from there, you can read every article in full. Note that the html views break each article into several separate pages, but you can also view in a “printer-ready” format that loads the entire article into a FlashPaper format, or you can view or download the full articles as pdfs.