
JOE SAMBERG

Paul Matzner at work

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IF SOMEONE ASKS YOU ABOUT a hike you've taken, chances
are you'll describe something you saw along the trail--the bright red stripe
on a blackbird's wing, the graceful loping of a deer as it disappeared
into the bush. But if you've just been out walking with Paul Matzner, you'll
be more likely to talk of what you heard--the "too-wheets," "whoos,"
and "pripps" emitted by various birds, or maybe the scrabbles,
rustles, and crackles of critters moving unseen through the undergrowth.
Matzner is a founder of the Nature
Sounds Society and curator of the California Library of Natural Sounds
of the Oakland Museum of California. He has spent countless hours listening
to animals and tape recording them in the wild. He is also keenly aware
of the intrusions of human noise on natural places.
I met with him early one Sunday
morning at Oakland's Arrowhead Marsh. This 50-acre wetland, which is shaped
like an arrow that points across San Leandro Bay toward Alameda, is an
excellent place to observe the aural interplay between human and natural
activities. Flocks of shorebirds feed on the water's edge, and even the
endangered California clapper rail finds refuge in the cordgrass. It is
not unusual to see hundreds of mallards, coots, widgeons, and dozens more
species swimming offshore. Behind the marsh is a popular trail and a large
lawn that invites sunbathing and picnicking. More important, the wetland
itself is sandwiched between the Oakland Airport and the industrial zone
along the Nimitz Freeway.
Matzner has been here many times
with his tape recorder. Today he is decked out in typical birdwatcher fashion,
with powerful binoculars around his neck and a well-worn copy of Peterson's
Field Guide to Western Birds in his pack. It's about 8 a.m. when we
meet, and the scene is relatively quiet. Few planes are taking off, trucks
and machinery are at rest. The only other humans we see are two joggers.
There's plenty of activity out on
the water, however--noisy activity. Two western gulls dominate the soundscape,
one pursuing the other, swimming close behind it, following every twist
and turn, emitting a long plaintive cry over and over. "I wish I knew
what that means," Matzner says. "I've never heard a gull make
that kind of sound before."
We all know that birds vocalize
for a variety of reasons--courtship, marking territory, danger warnings,
and quite possibly for the pure pleasure of singing. Matzner and other
researchers worry that loud human noise may interfere with these important
communications. A 1979 laboratory experiment measured the effects of 95
db sound (about the same volume as a dune buggy) on desert kangaroo rats.
The study, conducted for the federal Bureau of Land Management by M. C.
Bondello and B. H. Brattstrom, found that these rats did not react to the
presence of their archenemy, the sidewinder rattlesnake, until the snake
was less than an inch away, too close to escape. They normally begin kicking
sand toward the snake's eyes when it gets within 16 inches. The study also
showed that the rats did not recover from the hearing loss for three weeks.
In the mid-1980s, sound recordist
and musician Bernard Krause did a spectrographic analysis of nature recordings
he had made of animal species living on a small patch of land on the island
of St. Maarten in Borneo. Their calls varied from very low to very high
frequencies, but each species seemed to have its own "niche"
on the spectrum. They seemed to avoid areas where similarly pitched calls
were being made by other animals. Krause pointed out that the frequencies
of some human-made sounds, such of that of a chainsaw or airplane, matched
those of certain animal sounds, causing potential interference with communication.
He believes, along with Matzner and others, that further research in this
area is badly needed.


The gull's loud keening has distracted us from other birds' calls. But
a sudden "kaww" behind us causes Matzner to wheel around. "That
was a gull dive-bombing a Cooper's hawk in that tree over there,"
he says. Looking through the binoculars, I see the gull flying off, while
the hawk, a bit ruffled, settles onto an upper branch. "This is a
typical reaction to a hawk. Any bird in the neighborhood will chase it,"
Matzner explains.
When you listen, you notice much
more of what's going on around you than when you simply watch. We never
would have noticed the hawk if the other bird hadn't cried out. Our ears
serve as warning devices; for prehistoric hunter-gatherers, they were literally
lifesavers, Matzner reminds me. "We're smack in the middle of the
food chain. We needed to listen for predators and for our food in order
to survive." Now that we no longer worry about being stalked by man-eating
beasts, the old survival skills can serve to enhance our appreciation and
enjoyment of wild places.
We have stopped on a shoreline path
and are looking across the water toward the airport. Some long-billed,
long-legged willets are standing on a rock just offshore. "Listen,"
says Matzner. "They make a peculiar cry when startled." He rushes
toward them, loudly clapping. But the willets barely look around. He tries
again. The willets stay put. "These are some hard-boiled shorebirds
here," Matzner says.
Indeed, the birds at Arrowhead Marsh
seem to have made peace with the airplanes and other noises they're subjected
to every day. This is true in other noisy places as well. The largest breeding
colony of endangered least terns north of Santa Barbara is just a few feet
from the runway at the Alameda Naval Air Station. To survive, they have
had to adapt--since so many of California's wetlands have been destroyed,
they have to do with what remains, noisy or not.
The world is becoming noisier all
the time. Matzner and his colleagues in the Nature Sounds Society travel
widely to record bird and animal calls. A couple of decades ago, they could
find places in national parks where they heard nothing but pure natural
sound for 45 minutes or more. Now they're lucky if they get more than ten
minutes of quiet even in the most remote places. In California, Matzner
says, it's "almost impossible" to go more than four or five minutes
without hearing an aircraft motor or other human-generated noise.
As the day progresses, Arrowhead
Marsh becomes noisier as well. By 9 a.m. the din from the airport is almost
constant, and the roar of industrial compressors and trucks comes steadily
from the freeway side of the marsh. But we can still hear the soft whistles
of American widgeons, the musical calls of marbled godwits, and the comical,
half-mumbled complaints of a dozen or so slate-colored coots as they forage
along the banks. One by one the coots hop off a low embankment onto a mudflat,
each landing with a loud "plop" and then waddling away. "They're
kind of heavy-footed," Matzner says, laughing. We watch as a clapper
rail repeatedly dips its head into the mud, searching for small clams.
It's a rare sight. Suddenly a willet lands nearby, causing the rail to
fly up with a loud, startled "kracck." Matzner sighs. "I've
held a microphone up here for half an hour trying to get that squawk."
A bearded man with a gentle wit,
he is a biologist who did doctoral work in animal behavior at Rutgers University.
He came to his current occupation via some years of work in natural history
education, including a program he called "Fun with Frogs" for
kindergartners and first-graders, in which "you learned about ecology
by meeting an animal." When he came to the Oakland Museum's Library
of Natural Sounds in 1984, Matzner says, "my first assignment was
to travel around the state and listen to natural environments in preparation
for composing a sound environment to be installed in the museum."
For a biologist who is also a musician (he plays piano), this was a dream
job. He is not above cheating a little by using an assortment of noises
to attract birds. Now he holds his hand up to his lips to make a squeaky
"kiss" sound, as well as a high-pitched "whisch" and
a lower-pitched "pshish." An Anna's hummingbird perched in a
nearby tree answers back with its own shrill call, then flits off the branch
and flies toward us. It hovers, not six feet from Matzner's face, absolutely
still and fearless, staring directly at him for several seconds, then zips
off into the distance.
"I thought it was going to
attack me," Matzner says with mock relief in his voice. At this time
of the year, the hummer was probably trying to set up its territory and
perceived him as a potential threat, he explains. As we walk back to the
parking lot, a familiar chirping comes from the trees along the path. "Those
are song sparrows in full song," he says. "Spring is coming."
Matzner figures that he can identify around a hundred different birds by
ear, and I ask him for a few tips for improving my listening skills. Learn
to walk quietly, he says; wear cotton and wool clothing, which doesn't
rustle like nylon and other synthetics; and avoid loose buckles and fasteners
on backpacks, along with other things that rattle, he advises.
Don't get hung up trying to identify
every little sound, he adds. Relax and try to take in the full range of
what's happening around you. He says he thinks of the sound around him
as a symphony, with each animal, the wind, his own footsteps, and even
cars and airplanes playing different parts. Once you're aware of this symphonic
soundscape, it's much easier to notice subtle changes, such as the far-off
tapping of a woodpecker, which you may have otherwise missed.


About a week later, I decide to try out what Matzner taught me. For
the sake of a challenge, or maybe just out of perversity, I head for one
of the most visually alluring places on the California coast--Point Lobos,
just south of the town of Carmel.
This is a place that almost everyone
knows, if not from a personal visit, then from the black-and-white photographs
by Edward Weston, Ansel Adams, and Brett Weston that hang in galleries
throughout the world, as well as the bright color pictures taken by lesser
artists that grace the pages of countless guidebooks. What could possibly
be gained by focusing on the aural features of such a place, especially
on a beautiful winter morning, with the last traces of mist still clinging
to the rocks of Weston Cove?
As soon as we arrive I see I'm in
a minority here. Photographers toting the latest high-tech equipment aim
their cameras into every nook, cranny, and tide pool, or at the lone cattle
egret stalking a meal in the shallows. Some gather in small groups to discuss
f-stops and exposure times. Even my own wife, Sandy, is anxious to try
out a new zoom lens.
Not surprisingly, the sound of the
ocean is dominant here. I listen to the variety of wave sounds--the booming
crash of big breakers on the rocks, the subtle lapping of smaller waves
in the coves, the "shussh" of water as it recedes from a pebbly
beach. The egret notices, too. Every time it hears a wave break, the bird
picks its head up, probably looking to make sure it's not going to be inundated.
Even the most dedicated photographers are distracted by the raucous cries
of six oystercatchers chasing each other around the cove. Heading south
along the shoreline trail, I find that listening complements my visual
enjoyment of the Point. Hearing a familiar "zweeep," Sandy and
I look up to see a hummingbird high in the air. Again and again it hurtles
toward the ground, pulling up at the very last second in a spectacular
mating display. The upland trees are filled with birdsong, ranging from
sparrows' tiny peeps to the ominous caw-caws of crows. On a high cliff,
a group of tourists is making comical noises at a harbor seal resting on
a rock below. The seal eyes them briefly, then goes back to sleep. Out
in the water, a baby sea otter cries loudly and plaintively as it tries
to crawl onto its mother's belly. I might easily have missed all this and
more if I'd been focusing too much on the visual beauty of the place.
Afterward, Paul Matzner and I take
an evening stroll in the East Bay Hills. We discuss the Zen practice of
"listening to your breath" and how little quiet we actually experience
in our daily lives. "We're not really taught there's a value in silence,"
Matzner says. "We're afraid to be quiet. We're afraid to listen."
But we come to a broad overlook, and far across a valley, past the drone
of the highway below, we hear a pair of great horned owls hooting in the
darkness. As their calls reverberate back and forth, neither of us is tempted
to utter a word.
Bill O'Brien is a freelance writer in Berkeley.
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