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Information Ecology
Information Ecology

Information Ecology

In “Tracker Birds,” Derek Solomon writes:

The Rattling Cisticola, in spite of its small stature, has a serious dislike of invaders in its territory, and on many occasions, they will find a tracker moving through their territory, and call aggressively from a few metres away, following the tracker’s progress through its demarcated area, until they consider the human intrusion to be over.

This of course, causes an incredible wave of noise ahead of the stalking tracker, and alerts every animal for hundreds of feet ahead of his or her presence – and is an important part of understanding animal communication. Animals in our wild spaces understand one another so, so much better than we could ever imagine. The call of one, at the right intonation and pitch could cause an unbelievable ripple across the landscape ahead of it. Other species, mammalian, or avian, can interpret the tone of their neighbours. So, the sleepy buffalo you think you are tracking could be wide awake and waiting to meet the cause of the disturbance!

A change or disturbance affects the whole local area. Things don’t happen out of context. Connect, connect, connect.

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