Sounds intriguing to listen to the sounds bugs make while we photograph or watch them.
Here's a link to an amateur radio magazine article on building and using a device to listen to such things:
http://monitoringtimes.com/mt-utrasound-rx1.pdf
Of course, we'll need to have a stereo version - no need to limit one's self to mono sound!
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Does anyone recall much published or DIY work monitoring bug sounds? I am not thinking about the loud, easily human-audible sounds such as the ones crickets make of course. Maybe our bug friends are talking to one another intensively instead of working in silence as it seems?!?!
I hope this isn't yet another example of a topic I've proposed that has already been fully discussed on this most remarkable forum! All the search results I found were apparently related to ultrasonic cleaning of optics, etc.
DIY article on monitoring ultrasound from bugs
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
DIY article on monitoring ultrasound from bugs
-Phil
"Diffraction never sleeps"
"Diffraction never sleeps"
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I don't know about DIY but one of the staff (Broughton) at Sir John Cass College in London was recording aphid sounds in the late 1960s-early 1970s when I was studying there.
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/di ... id=2534536
Harold
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/di ... id=2534536
Harold
My images are a medium for sharing some of my experiences: they are not me.
I can't begin to imagine aphids making sounds! Perhaps they make sheep-like sounds since they seem to function as cattle for ants? (grins)Harold Gough wrote:I don't know about DIY but one of the staff (Broughton) at Sir John Cass College in London was recording aphid sounds in the late 1960s-early 1970s when I was studying there.
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/di ... id=2534536
Harold
-Phil
"Diffraction never sleeps"
"Diffraction never sleeps"