| Literature DB >> 34045545 |
Sierra N Clark1,2, Abosede S Alli3, Ricky Nathvani1,2, Allison Hughes4, Majid Ezzati1,2,5,6, Michael Brauer7, Mireille B Toledano1,2,8, Jill Baumgartner9,10, James E Bennett1,2, James Nimo4, Josephine Bedford Moses4, Solomon Baah4, Samuel Agyei-Mensah11, George Owusu12, Briony Croft13, Raphael E Arku14.
Abstract
Urban noise pollution is an emerging public health concern in growing cities in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), but the sound environment in SSA cities is understudied. We leveraged a large-scale measurement campaign to characterize the spatial and temporal patterns of measured sound levels and sound sources in Accra, Ghana. We measured sound levels and recorded audio clips at 146 representative locations, involving 7-days (136 locations) and 1-year measurements between 2019 and 2020. We calculated metrics of noise levels and intermittency and analyzed audio recordings using a pre-trained neural network to identify sources. Commercial, business, and industrial areas and areas near major roads had the highest median daily sound levels (LAeq24hr: 69 dBA and 72 dBA) and the lowest percentage of intermittent sound; the vice-versa was found for peri urban areas. Road-transport sounds dominated the overall sound environment but mixtures of other sound sources, including animals, human speech, and outdoor music, dominated in various locations and at different times. Environmental noise levels in Accra exceeded both international and national health-based guidelines. Detailed information on the acoustical environmental quality (including sound levels and types) in Accra may guide environmental policy formulation and evaluation to improve the health of urban residents.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34045545 PMCID: PMC8160008 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90454-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Noise metrics in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area and across land use areas.
| Metrics and units | LAeq24hr | Lday | Lnight | IR24hr | IRday | IRnight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greater Accra Metropolitan Area | 62 (58, 67) | 63 (59, 68) | 55 (51, 61) | 53 (37, 64) | 46 (32, 59) | 52 (35, 67) |
| Accra Metropolitan Area | 66 (61, 70) | 67 (62, 71) | 58 (53, 64) | 49 (31, 60) | 40 (25, 53) | 51 (39, 66) |
| Peri-urban background | 56 (54, 59) | 57 (55, 60) | 50 (49, 53) | 60 (51, 68) | 58 (47, 67) | 40 (20, 58) |
| Medium/low-density residential | 61 (58, 64) | 62 (59, 66) | 54 (51, 57) | 55 (42, 64) | 48 (35, 59) | 57 (38, 69) |
| High-density residential | 67 (63, 69) | 68 (64, 70) | 60 (54, 64) | 51 (35, 64) | 43 (29, 57) | 57 (38, 69) |
| Commercial, business, industrial | 69 (66, 71) | 70 (68, 72) | 63 (60, 67) | 36 (27, 54) | 30 (18, 44) | 50 (36, 65) |
| 69 (63, 72) | 70 (64, 73) | 64 (58, 68) | 33 (19, 49) | 23 (11, 40) | 41 (30, 54) | |
Data are expressed as medians and interquartile ranges (IQR). Each of the 136 rotating sites have 7-days of measurement and fixed sites have data spanning 12-months.
LAeq24hr: A-weighted equivalent continuous 24-h sound level; Lday and Lnight: A-weighted equivalent continuous sound level in the day and night-time; IR24hr: 24-h Intermittency Ratio; IRday and IRnight: Day- and night-time Intermittency Ratio.
*Medium/low-density residential are typically formal residential areas; high-density residential are typically informal residential areas and could be classified as shantytowns or slums; peri-urban background are the least built-up areas and typically have an abundance of forest, grass land, shrubs, barren land, and/or water; commercial, business and industrial areas are places which are dominated by commercial, business, industrial, and/or government activities (see full criteria in S8).
**10 fixed sites had 3 CBI areas along major motorways, 2 sites in high-density residential neighborhoods, 4 sites in medium/low-density residential areas and one at a peri-urban background location.
Figure 1Median sound level and intermittency metrics for rotating and fixed site locations in the GAMA. For the color legend scales, a bracket means that the value in the range is included and a parenthesis means that the value in the range is not included. Road network is from OpenStreetMap and the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA) and Accra Metropolitan Area (AMA) boundary from Ghana Statistical Service. A waterbody is depicted on the map in light blue. LAeq24hr: A-weighted equivalent continuous 24-h sound level; Lday and Lnight: A-weighted equivalent continuous sound level in the day and night-time; IR24hr: 24-h Intermittency Ratio.
Figure 2Cumulative density (distribution) functions (CDF) of 1-min sound levels (dBA) across a 24-h day period in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area. Data from rotating sites. Blue lines represent time periods in the nighttime and early morning (8 pm–8 am) and red and orange lines represent periods in the daytime (8 am–8 pm). CBI: Commercial, business, industrial areas; LAeq: 1-min A-weighted equivalent continuous sound level; dBA: A-weighted decibels.
Detection of sound
source prevalence across land use areas in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area*.
| Road-transport (%) | Animals and insects (%) | Outdoor music (%) | Human speech (%) | Nature (%) | Aircraft (within flightpath)** | Aircraft (outside flight path)** | Other (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greater Accra Metropolitan Area | 64 | 39 | 10 | 23 | 4 | 29 | 14 | 39 |
| Accra Metropolitan Area | 78 | 24 | 13 | 29 | 2 | 29 | 15 | 35 |
| Peri-urban background | 40 | 65 | 4 | 8 | 9 | – | – | 41 |
| Medium/ low-density residential | 64 | 43 | 10 | 22 | 3 | – | – | 40 |
| High-density residential | 71 | 30 | 15 | 33 | 2 | – | – | 40 |
| Commercial, business, industrial | 85 | 16 | 9 | 28 | 1 | – | – | 31 |
| 82 | 16 | 16 | 29 | 1 | – | – | 32 | |
Data are expressed as the percentage (%) of site-time present.
*The top three sound classes based on modelled probability of presence were retained for each 10-s audio clip.
**Within/outside of 1 km of take-off/descent flight path for Kotoka airport (n = 7 rotating and n = 1 fixed site near flight path).
***Medium/low-density residential are typically formal residential areas; high-density residential are typically informal residential areas and could be classified as shantytowns or slums; peri-urban background are the least built-up areas and typically have an abundance of forest, grass land, shrubs, barren land, and/or water; commercial, business and industrial areas are places which are dominated by commercial, business, industrial, and/or government activities (see full criteria in S8).
*** 9 fixed sites had 3 CBI areas along major motorways, 2 sites in high-density residential neighborhoods, 3 sites in medium/low-density residential areas and one at a peri-urban location.
Figure 3Prevalence of sound sources within land use areas and varying sound levels (LAeq1min) in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area. Data from rotating sites. The percentage of site-time that each sound
source was present was calculated from the data within each land use area and sound level interval separately.
Figure 4Diurnal patterns of the percentage of site-time that detected road-transport, animal and insect, human speech, outdoor music and nature sound sources were present for each hour of the day and within land use areas in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area. Data are from rotating sites, but fixed sites had similar trends.
Population density and vegetation at measurement sites.
| High-density residential | Medium/low-density residential | Commercial, business, industrial | Peri-urban background | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) (value range: 0–1)* | 0.09 (0.03) | 0.13 (0.04) | 0.10 (0.03) | 0.22 (0.06) |
| Population density (people/km2) | 35,833 (42,011) | 6881 (9612) | 7966 (9220) | 1701 (3867) |
Data are summarized as means and standard deviations within land use areas.
*To capture vegetation in the area surrounding each site, we created a 200 m radius buffer around the site and calculated the average NDVI within it. NDVI can be a negative value, which would indicate water, though at all of our measurement sites, NDVI levels were positive between 0 and + 1.