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The World Conservation Union estimates that one in three amphibian species is at risk for extinction. Rice, 41, wants to capture as many on tape as possible before they're gone. "It's very much a race against time," he said. He figures the library has recordings of about 75 percent of the 53 frog and toad species in the states involved
-- Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. It has about 70 percent of the birds and dozens of mammal and reptile recordings. The recordings, even heard from the safety of a desktop, can stir something primal in the DNA, a sudden flight response, for instance, in the case of the rattlesnake. "Responses to those kinds of sounds are almost reflexive," Fristrup said. He said Rice's archive could help people learn what animals they're hearing in the wild, even if they can't see them. "Most of us learn to ignore what our ears tell us and focus on the task at hand because we live in really noisy habitat," Fristrup said. "But in some ways, hearing is the most alerting sense, directing us to things that matter." There are already several natural sound archives available on the Web, including the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in Ithaca, N.Y., which says it has the largest sound and video archive of animal behavior. The West, though, has never been fully represented, Rice said. "I think we have a tendency to take for granted what we have in our own backyard," he said. ___ On the Net: Western Soundscape Archive: http://www.westernsoundscape.org/
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