Recording bird songs all around the world has been my passion since childhood. Join me on an audio trip to Australia, Nebraska and Hawaii and listen to some of the birds at each location. We will end our trip in my backyard here in Ohio, where the local songbirds are emphatically greeting spring.
Early in my career as a research biologist, I took a faculty position at the University of Sydney (Australia), where I studied both spider ecology, and bird song. I was fascinated by geographic variation in song, and also the function of female song in the Grey Shrike-thrush (Colluricincla harmonica), a common bird in the open woodlands, heathlands and riparian habitats of Australia.
The song of the Grey Shrike-thrush (Colluricincla harmonica) contains many whistled phrases and is very sonorous to my ear. Note the specific epithet “harmonica” in the Latin name of this bird that was given by John Latham in 1802, referring to the beautiful song. Much of my research on Grey shrike-thrushes was done with Peter Higgins, and is summarized in the species account in the Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds (Higgins & Peter 2002). Our song recordings from around Australia revealed dramatic geographic variation in the songs of these birds. Each individual sings many different motifs, and both males and females sing. Their songs are geographically distinct, somewhat like dialects in human language.
Listen to an edited audio clip of several different song motifs from a Grey Shrike-thrush. You can also hear the calls of a variety of other Australian birds including the Noisy Friarbird (Philemon corniculatus) heard just as the second shrike-thrush song occurs, and the constant “chips” and “two-note” songs of the White-eared Honeyeater (Nesoptilotis leucotis).
Of course THE iconic bird sound from Australia is that of the Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae) These birds engage in pre-dawn communal calling that resonates through the bush. This is the largest kingfisher in the world, and their vocalizations are amazingly loud! No wonder it is referred to as “the bushman’s alarm clock.”
Listen to the audio clip of a chorus of Laughing Kookaburras, recorded at the Crommelin Field Station, New South Wales, Australia. Does this sound familiar? Don’t these amazing sounds evoke the jungle of your favorite old Tarzan movie? Just think of how many times these birds have played a starring role in movie soundtracks.
Two years ago I traveled to Nebraska in early spring and witnessed one of the amazing wildlife spectacles of North America: The dawn dance of the Sharp-tailed Grouse (Tympanucus phasianellus). These amazing chicken-like birds display in large groups of males early in the morning in prairie grasslands. This type of communal male display ground is called a lek. The females visit the lek and pick the best song-and-dance routine, then mate with that male. For a visual impression of this display watch this video from a cold April morning on the Arrowwood National Wildlife Refuge in North Dakota.
Listen to an audio clip of the amazing sounds, pops, cooing sounds, tail rattles, and stomping feet of Sharp-tailed Grouse males displaying on a lek. I made these recordings at Calamus Ranch in Nebraska during the early spring 2014. You can also hear the songs of Western Meadowlarks (Sturnella neglecta) in the background (e.g. at 1:10).
This February my travels took me to the islands of Hawaii. I did not bring my professional field recording gear with me, but with modern technology at hand I used my iPhone to record the songs of Apapanes (Himatione sanguinea). This is a remarkable, bright red, Hawaiian Honeycreeper (Family Drepanididae) endemic to Hawaii.
Listen to this recording of Apapane at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park made with my iPhone.
I enjoy my travels, but nothing makes me feel more at home than the familiar sound of my Ohio backyard birds near Delaware, Ohio. Recently I have recorded the song of a Carolina Wren (Thryothorus ludovicianus) that greets us every morning. This wren is one of the few birds that can be heard singing during the winter in central Ohio.
Listen to this audio clip of the (loud) Carolina Wren accompanied by a number of other birds in the background, such as Northern Cardinals, American Robins, etc.
I enjoy listening to the sounds of birds wherever I go, it is a simple pleasure that enriches my life. I challenge you to go outside and listen!
About the Author: Richard Bradley is Associate Professor emeritus, The Ohio State University. He taught university students for over 30 years at California State University, Long Beach, the University of Sydney (Australia), and The Ohio State University at Marion. His published research includes work on bird song, behavioral ecology of birds and spiders, and population biology of scorpions. He is a research associate of the Borror Laboratory of Bioacoustics and the Acarology Laboratory at the Museum of Biodiversity. In 2013 he published the first comprehensive color guide to the Spiders of North America.
Reference
Higgins, P.J. and J.M. Peter (eds). 2002. Grey Shrike-thrush pp. 1189-1224 In: Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds, v 6. Oxford Press, Melbourne.
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