ENVIRONMENT & CLIMATENoise pollution does not just affect humans; it also threatens wildlife. Read to find out more. Noise pollution could lead to health complications for both land and sea wildlife, making it an invisible danger.
A new study suggests that roadside noise pollution could affect the songbirds' ability to learn, as well as compromise the ability of some crickets to mate.
New research reveals how traffic noise and other man-made sounds affect crickets' mating behavior and potentially affect the species' future prospects for survival.
In a busy world, a good night's sleep has become difficult to come by, leading people to download any of the white noise apps available today. But a new study claims that this method is not as good as it appears to be.
Fish exposed to noise pollution become more susceptible to diseases, with prolonged exposure leading to early death, according to the latest study describing effects of human activities to nature.
The US government's continued open access to drill oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge could harm natives hunting as well as animal populations like caribou and wolves. Animals like birds and polar bears are also vulnerable to oil spills.
A new study claimed that the harms of noise pollution even witnessed in more than sixty percent of the silence zone and most protected natural reserves; Know more here