naturerecordists
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: Clanton, AL

Subject: Re: Clanton, AL
From: "Steve Pelikan" pelikan45224
Date: Wed Jun 13, 2007 6:12 pm ((PDT))
Very nice, David. Thanks!

Now I've got to hear those bird-voiced treefrogs too! Someday...

There's a Whip in there at the end as well?
Steve P

David Michael wrote:
>
>
> Hello
>
> I was in Clanton Alabama this past weekend visiting a friend's farm.
> A mile or so down the ridge from her house, there were some swampy
> ponds that provided habitat for beaver and half a dozen or so species
> of frogs. We hiked down there at sunset hoping to hear something (she
> had never been down there after dark).
>
> When we got down there, it seemed like every frog species in the area
> had congregated in these pools. As some of you on the list well know,
> Alabama (and Georgia) has been extraordinarily dry this season. Many
> of the springs and ponds in the area were completely dry. It seems
> that the only places in this area that were retaining water were the
> valleys like this one.
>
> We got to the site a little late, after the choruses started. A
> generator or something had started somewhere in the distance that was
> not running when we scouted the location earlier in the day. It also
> seems that the county roads were closer than we had assumed.
> Furthermore, I have to honestly say that I was not prepared for how
> drastically the forest changes at night, and we left the site to
> return to the house while the treeline was still visible. So all in
> all, we were on site for about 30 minutes, which was not enough time
> to wait for the sounds of man to quiet down.
>
> In this recording, there are bird-voiced treefrogs, green treefrogs,
> distant bullfrogs and green frogs, cricket frogs (I think), and
> others that I cannot identify. If someone on the list would like to
> take a crack at species identification, that would be great. I had
> never heard a bird-voiced treefrog before, and I am now completely
> obsessed with them. You will also hear the sound of a generator
> coming from somewhere miles away and a passing car. The car seems to
> stimulate the green treefrogs to call.
>
> The whole episode has had me a little sleepless. All the things I
> have read about the structure of choruses do not really match the
> experience of listening to the bouts of one species sweeping over an
> area and stimulating other species to sound in turn. Hearing this
> multi-species chorus has got me wanting to move out of New York
> *immediately* to find a nice little plot of land. Perhaps this can
> happen by next spring.
>
> I also cant stop thinking about how close man is to everything. Even
> in a ridge valley full of coyotes, deer, beaver, and myriad frogs, we
> are not far away and in many cases getting closer. With us come our
> flatline sound generators. I suppose it just strikes me that its all
> at this interesting balance, but one that we could tip voluntarily at
> any time. It would not take but a single business deal to bring
> bulldozers to those ponds in Clanton.
>
> http://unnature.org/assets/2007/6/14/Clanton_AL.mp3
> <http://unnature.org/assets/2007/6/14/Clanton_AL.mp3>
> (4.2Mb 3mins)
>
> Best
> David
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> No virus found in this incoming message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.5.472 / Virus Database: 269.8.15/846 - Release Date: 6/12/2007=
 5:10 PM





<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the naturerecordists mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU