![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() You can enjoy this five-part podcast on this site, download it, or listen with your favorite podcast app such as Apple Podcasts, Podbean, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Podcasts. Discover some of the extraordinary soundscapes scientists are recording, the surprising ways that animals talk and listen, and how the unexpected patches of quiet triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic are driving a new commitment to hushing anthropogenic ocean noise. Hakai Magazine invites you to join us and listen in under the waves. Lobsters, octopuses, fishes, and more all use sound to communicate and navigate, to find each other, or to swim the other way. And it’s not just so for singing humpback whales. It’s probably no surprise then, that for ocean animals, hearing is paramount. And the deeper you dive, the darker it becomes. In shallow coastal waters, water is often murky, even opaque. At the edge of the ocean, all of our senses are engaged-the breeze on our skin, the scent of rotting seaweed, the sparkle of light on the waves. ![]()
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