Saturday, April 10, 2010

Mystery Sonagram #2

I recorded these two birds this morning in Philadelphia, PA at Harper's Meadow. I will give you a hint, both of these birds songs are "trills". I will post the audio on Monday. Email albrigh_1999@yahoo.com if you would like to log an answer before I post the audio.


CLICK TO ENLARGE ANY SONAGRAM


Click here for audio recording for both birds

Click here to hear a louder recording of Bird B

This second sonagram is an enlargement of the first bird in the composite sonagram above.

Bird A




This third sonagram is an enlargement of the second birdsong in the composite sonagram above.
Bird B

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Mystery Sonogram #1


Recorded at dawn March 1st in mature forest/mature suburban edge.
Philadelphia (southeast Pennsylvania).
I've only heard this call Jan-March and it isn't on the Stokes' CD for this species.

Email answer to albrigh_1999@yahoo.com

Note for those not used to looking at sonagrams: 8-10 kHz is actually pretty high pitched.
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/studying/birdsongs/son
"The first sonogram shows a 24-second recording of an American Goldfinch song. The song includes frequencies from about 2 kHz to 8 kHz."


Here is a the recording from which the sonagram came:


Click here for the answer:

Friday, July 24, 2009

American Redstart, Black-and-White Warbler, or something else?

American Redstart, Black-White Warbler or other?
Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2009 18:48:35 -0700

Recorded this morning (6 am) in Andorra Natural Area, Philadelphia.

I thought for sure that it was a Black-And-White Warbler this morning when I heard it. But then I'm completely stumped when I compare the sonogram to known American Redstart and Black-And-White Warbler.

The sonagrams don't look like either standard A. Redstart or Black-and-White Warbler sonagrams.
Number of repeats - more like A. Redstart
Pitch - more like Warbler
Quality - more like BW Warbler

I have a better recording than the one I posted earlier where the bird sings multiple times: 8 secs, 11 secs, 16 secs, 24 secs, 31 secs

click here for the WMA sound file download.

Here is a sonagram at 8 secs:











11 secs:










16 secs











24 secs













31 secs













Click here to download another WMA* file here:



It was at the top of a tree. There are plenty of Redstarts breeding in the area, but I haven't seen any BW Warblers since migration.


Sincerely,
Andrew Albright
Lafayette Hill, PA


*WMA seems to work for most people, I also have it as a larger mp3 file.