Hi Lang,
>From your list, I only have howls of the timber wolf, warning snorts
from an adult white-tailed deer and the suckling sound of a young
raccoon. I also have the sounds of 9 frog species from eastern North
America.=20
All the best,
Monty
-----Original Message-----
From: Lang Elliott
Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2004 2:43 PM
To:
Subject: [Nature Recordists] Re: mammal recordings
Hello Group!
I haven't been on for quite awhile, but here I am still alive and
kicking!
I am in need of some mammal recordings. I am re-publishing my guide
"Wild Sounds of the Northwoods", broadening it a bit to include all of
eastern/central North America. This guide includes recordings of
mammals, frogs, one insect, plus a lot of birds.
My mammal coverage is the weakest. I could use better recordings of the
following (I need enough material to edit down to around 45 seconds or
so):
Fox Squirrel (typical calls)
Red Fox (anything)
Gray Fox (I have doglike barks; what else do they do?)
Timber Wolf (nice howling)
Bobcat (anything)
Black Bear (anything typical)
Groundhog (the alarm whistle)
Raccoon (but only the subtle garbled sounds made as they feed and move
about)
White-tailed Deer (alarm call of fawn)
Porcupine (male breeding call)
Moose (gawuks of male, moo of female)
Cougar (anything good)
Opossum (anything good)
Short-tailed Shrew (alarm squealing)
Meadow Vole (alarm squealing)
White-footed Mouse (alarm squealing)
Bit Brown Bat (alarm or chips given in flight)
+ any other eastern/central species that make good sense
I will not include all of these in my guide, but I do plan to use any
really good recordings I can find.
Lang
Lang Elliott
NatureSound Studio
www.naturesound.com
"Microphones are not ears,
Loudspeakers are not birds,
A listening room is not nature."
Klas Strandberg
Yahoo! Groups Links
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