72. “What We Learn Listening to Birds” with Dr David Mann, HaikuBox

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Welcome to episode 72 of the Nurtured by Nature podcast, today I’m delighted to be joined in conversation by Dr David Mann founder of HaikuBox a unique smart device that allows you to listen to and monitor the bird calls in your garden 24/7.

Birdwatching or twitching is one of my favourite pastimes, allowing us a connection to the natural world that is accessible to all of us regardless of our backgrounds or our locations. Birding in urban areas is equally as rewarding as it is in more rural settings. 

I have always believed that people will passionately protect what they love and understand and the HaikuBox is a wonderful tool to help us build a deeper relationship with the birds and acoustic landscape that surrounds us but can easily be overlooked. Beyond being incredibly fun to learn who is sharing your home with you, sometimes with some unexpected surprises, the HaikuBox also gathers valuable data that conservationists are able to use to both understand and conserve our avian friends. From the impacts of solar eclipses and wild fires to migration patterns the data you help collect is invaluable to understanding more about our birds. 

David also shares some other incredibly interesting uses for bioacoustics monitoring from Elephants in Africa and the signature whistles of Florida’s Bottlenose dolphins that can identify individuals to the Indigenous communities in northwestern Canada employing HaikuBox technology to ensure Beluga Whales don’t become trapped when winter ice blocks various waterways. 

David reminds us how easy it can be to make a difference in this world, by learning to appreciate and then simple encourage and nurture the native wild plants and wildlife that share our homes, we can make an incredible impact.

Learn more about David

Haikubox’s founder, David Mann, grew up in Syracuse, NY and spent a lot of time outdoors, no matter the weather. David was fascinated by birds and watched them at home and at nearby Sapsucker Woods on the Cornell University campus. 

David went on to study biology at Cornell and earned a PhD in biological oceanography from MIT and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, where his research focused on animal bioacoustics. 

Haikubox was hatched when David and a colleague at the K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology realized they shared a common interest and the technical skills to develop an automatic birdsong identification tool. 

HaikuBox:

Haikubox is the smart device that brings consumers real-time bird alerts, birdsong recordings and loads of information about their backyard birds. Using its proprietary neural net trained on thousands of bird recordings, Haikubox listens 24/7 for every bird song and chirp and shares what it learns via the Haikubox Listen website and mobile app. 

Customer favorites include phone and smartwatch bird alerts, the ability to favorite, download and share birdsong recordings, and learning to identify hidden species by their vocalizations. 

Every Haikubox owner becomes a community scientist within the Haikubox network, contributing invaluable data for scientific research through a collaboration with the K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics at the Lab of Ornithology.

Website: www.haikubox.com

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/HaikuboxNature#

Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/haikubox/

BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/haikubox.bsky.social  

Thank you for being a part of this journey with me.

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