Mark
The site is chock a block with Ovenbirds but their dominant
frequency seems to be a solid 5 kHz.
Greg Kunkel
--- "Alt, Mark" <> wrote:
> Perhaps an Ovenbird? Its cadence sounds right, though it sounds a
> bit like Bay-breasted, as well. A sonogram would show which was
> probable, the Ovenbird having a much wider band of frequencies.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From:
> On Behalf Of Greg Kunkel
> Sent: Monday, May 22, 2006 11:08 AM
> To:
> Subject: [Nature Recordists] unknown bird
>
> Yesterday(Sunday) my automated recording system in Andes NY
> captured a
> song I do not recognize. It is centered at 8kHz and I could not
> hear
> it until I amplified it. Probably a warbler but I cannot find a
> sound
> spectrogram that matches it.
> Can anybody give me help with the ID?
> http://www.catskill.net/gkunk/birds/054423XF.mp3
>
> Greg Kunkel
> http://www.catskill.net/gkunk/birds/
>
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> "Microphones are not ears,
> Loudspeakers are not birds,
> A listening room is not nature."
> Klas Strandberg
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
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--------------------------------------------------------------------~->
>
>
> "Microphones are not ears,
> Loudspeakers are not birds,
> A listening room is not nature."
> Klas Strandberg
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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