Nature Done Wright

Incorporating the Celery Farm and Screech Owl Companion blogs

September 12, 2019

Can You Help I.D. This Bird Song?

Valerie Knipping writes:

Could you please help me identify this singer?

On Sunday I was at the North Beach at Sandy Hook. In the shrubbery near the exit to the parking lot I heard the singer.

The bird would sing 5 to7 repetitions then a 2 second pause then would continue this pattern for about a minute with a long pause and then begin the set again.

It would sing at the top of a cedar tree moving from the spread out cedars amongst the shrubs and plants from time to time.

Once I saw it fly but due to sun glare and a quick flight best I could see what appeared to be a somewhat dark bird smallish size sparrow perhaps but looked like longer wings.

Download Mystery singer

Thanks for any suggestions or answers.

 

 

3 comments

  • so i called in reinforcements because this was driving me batty. ???
    i invited some folks in a birding group on facebook to check out this post to see if we could get an id. a few tried but couldn’t get the sound file to work. everyone who succeeded in getting the file to work (4 birders) identified the bird as a white-eyed vireo. 🙂
    thanks for the adventure. learned something new!

  • Thank you for all the time you spent helping me identify the Sandy Hook singer.
    Unfortunately, the 3 flycatcher species songs don’t match.
    I compared the songs of the species that you mentioned from xeno-canto.org which is another good source for song bird identification.
    I’m grateful for your efforts.
    If you have any other ideas I’m a willing listener!
    Val

  • I’m listening on not the best speakers in the world, and the recording is also a little quiet – but – I would suggest checking out sound files for the following flycatchers: the Traill’s flycatchers (Willow and Alder), and Acadian Flycatcher. It sounded a lot like a Willow to me, but then, of the three species, Willow is the one I have the most experience with, and it didn’t sound absolutely perfect to me, almost a little too musical. Again, not the best speakers though. But that’s why I branched out, checked out, and included the other two. There are lots of people who have more experience with Alder and Acadian who might have a better idea (and have a lot more experience birding Sandy Hook during fall migration) who could easily rule them out.
    Of those 3 species, the most likely is Willow anyway, looking at eBird data for Sandy Hook, so there’s that. Acadian and Alder in the fall at Sandy Hook are quite unlikely. 🙂
    One great online source for listening to sound files of birds is Cornell’s allaboutbirds.org.

Leave a comment.

3 comments

  • so i called in reinforcements because this was driving me batty. ???
    i invited some folks in a birding group on facebook to check out this post to see if we could get an id. a few tried but couldn’t get the sound file to work. everyone who succeeded in getting the file to work (4 birders) identified the bird as a white-eyed vireo. 🙂
    thanks for the adventure. learned something new!

  • Thank you for all the time you spent helping me identify the Sandy Hook singer.
    Unfortunately, the 3 flycatcher species songs don’t match.
    I compared the songs of the species that you mentioned from xeno-canto.org which is another good source for song bird identification.
    I’m grateful for your efforts.
    If you have any other ideas I’m a willing listener!
    Val

  • I’m listening on not the best speakers in the world, and the recording is also a little quiet – but – I would suggest checking out sound files for the following flycatchers: the Traill’s flycatchers (Willow and Alder), and Acadian Flycatcher. It sounded a lot like a Willow to me, but then, of the three species, Willow is the one I have the most experience with, and it didn’t sound absolutely perfect to me, almost a little too musical. Again, not the best speakers though. But that’s why I branched out, checked out, and included the other two. There are lots of people who have more experience with Alder and Acadian who might have a better idea (and have a lot more experience birding Sandy Hook during fall migration) who could easily rule them out.
    Of those 3 species, the most likely is Willow anyway, looking at eBird data for Sandy Hook, so there’s that. Acadian and Alder in the fall at Sandy Hook are quite unlikely. 🙂
    One great online source for listening to sound files of birds is Cornell’s allaboutbirds.org.

Leave your comment

Share :

Subscribe

* indicates required

Intuit Mailchimp

Related Post