Listen
to the Birds of North America
NOTE: Links on this page are external and will open
in a new window.
Sometimes birds are easier heard than seen. Identifying birds by their
songs or calls can enhance your birding experience. Clicking the links
on the bird names will take you to the species accounts at the Patuxent
Bird Identification InfoCenter where you can then click to hear the
individual bird songs. "Songbird" usually refers to one of the passerine or "perching
birds" so common to our surroundings---the Northern
cardinal, Carolina
wren, or Eastern
towhee. However, almost all birds use some sort of song, call, or
note to communicate. Thrushes are
generally considered among the finest of songsters while the egrets
and herons utter little more than guttural croaks.
Generally the best time to hear birds singing
is in the early morning hours from dawn to mid-morning. Of course,
dont forget the nighttime
vocalists like barred
owl and Chuck-wills-widow.
Even the Northern
mockingbird which mimics the calls of other birds may be heard singing
on moonlit nights during the nesting season.
Certain birds are easier to identify by their songs since their common
name is an interpretation of their song. Birds like the Northern
bobwhite, Eastern
phoebe, and Eastern
wood pewee all say their names. Most bird sounds give no hint towards
their names so studying recordings or viewing singing birds in the field
are the only way to associate the songs with the songster. You can use
mnemonic devices to help remember the songs of different species. For
example, the song of the white-throated
sparrow is often described as saying Poor Sam Peabody, Peabody,
Peabody.
Birdsongs vary in length and complexity. The Acadian
flycatcher has a brief two note song which may be repeated only
a few times in a minute while the red-eyed
vireo may repeat the phrases in its song almost continually earning
the colloquial "preacher bird" name.
Songs of the same species can vary with individual birds from region
to region. Listen not only to the individual notes of the song but the
overall pattern. The common
yellowthroat is known for the variations in its song but overall
pattern is consistent.
Long, short, simple, or complex the calls and songs of birds add greatly
to our outdoor experience.
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