A Song for August 20

Previous Day  List of Days  Next Day

If the playback aborts before the end, trying playing the sound from inside the checklist.

More Red Crossbills, this time in the Wallowa Mountains of northeastern Oregon. Geologically, and biogeographically, the Wallowas are part of the Rocky Mountains, the only salient of that province into the state. So, one would expect them to have a different kind of Red Crossbill from the rest of Oregon. These crossbills, recorded on an Oregon Field Ornithologists field trip, do in fact use the Type 5 flight call, common in the southern Rocky Mountains. Starting at 0:33 on the sonogram you can make out the peculiar non-parallel traces on these distinctive sounds. These sonograms are dead ringers for the first example give in Matthew Young and Tim Spahr's Crossbills of North America: Species and Red Crossbill Call Types .


SOURCES

In writing the commentary for these posts I have made extensive use of the invaluable bioacoustic resources listed below. For phylogenetic information, I often start with a web search of "Phylogeny of x," where x is an avian genus, family, or order. That is a hit-or-miss proposition. A recently-released resource that makes phylogenetic queries more systematic is the Birds of the World website from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. If you follow the link and type the name of an avian family into the search box, you will be able to visit a home page for that family that presents the number of genera and species, and an illustration for each genus. If you subscribe, you will get more information. Also available to subscribers is the Birds of the World species accounts. Rolled out in 2020, this is currently an amalgam of the Birds of North America series, that was initiated by the American Ornithologists' Union around 1990, a recently-initiated online equivalent for Neotropical Birds, and the Handbook of Birds of the World series that was produced by Lynx Edicions, also beginning in the 90s. BNA has been hosted by the Lab of O for some time, and they recently added HBW to their portfolio. Especially useful for my purposes is the Systematics History subsection of the BNA accounts. EBird still has its separate species pages for all the birds of the world. These feature photos, recordings, range maps, and numerical eBird statistics, but little text. Overall, the abundance and availability of resources is astounding. Never has so much been available to so many for so little.

Previous Day  List of Days  Next Day
Email: web at archmcallum.com

INVALUABLE RESOURCES
Nathan D. Pieplow. 2017. Peterson Field Guide to Bird Sounds of Eastern North America. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Nathan D. Pieplow. 2019. Peterson Field Guide to Bird Sounds of Western North America. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Donald Kroodsma. 2005. The Singing Life of Birds. Houghton Mifflin.