[Tweeters] Wrentit question and Pacific Cty Bullock's Oriole
Steven Dammer
dammerecologist1990 at gmail.com
Sun Jan 29 21:43:35 PST 2023
I could definitely see this fitting after hearing that XenoCanto recording,
thank you for that link, Steve!
Casey, after listening to your recording I was thinking much the same
thing, after spending about 2.5 weeks in California last April, their
song/call is lodged in my brain forever. I'd much agree that this is at
least plausible!
ALSO, whether it's that I've just never been a part of a forum discussing
this Wrentit quandary, I am SHOCKED after pulling up their map on eBird.
Never would have thought to even consider it for Washington. But I cannot
believe that with so many opportunities for crossing the Columbia, they
just won't do it. There's literally a bridge!
Anyway, quandaries aside, applause on your plausible Wrentit!
Happy Birding,
Steven Dammer
On Sun, Jan 29, 2023 at 9:02 PM Steve Hampton <stevechampton at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Casey,
>
> Having birded in California for decades, I'm quite familiar with Wrentits
> and, to be honest, did not expect your recording to be like one. After
> listening to it, I'm fairly convinced it actually is a Wrentit!
>
> First, as you describe, it sounds like one, without a trill. Note that
> females do not do the trill at the end. Here's an example of a "half-song",
> probably a female. https://xeno-canto.org/351988
>
> Second, the sonogram fits well, especially with recordings that are some
> distance away. For example, compare it to the background bird on my
> recording here -- https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/217940591
> --especially the note on my recording at about 5.4 seconds in. Your bird's
> sonogram also has a hint of a flatish declining top, which some Wrentit
> sonograms show. Some also show a double wave at the top, but yours (and
> mine above) show a single wave. Finally, the call notes on your recording
> at 21 and 22.5 seconds show a harmonic at 6 kHz, exactly where the harmonic
> in the female call note is. I cannot find a clean example of a female at
> the moment, but there's one between 7 and 10 seconds here in the background
> behind the trill of a male. https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/212160
> Ignoring the trill, the sonogram here looks like yours.
>
> Do you have a lat-long for this bird? It should be confirmed visually.
> I've always thought Washington's first Wrentit would be upriver of Portland
> (not counting Puget Island), but I think they can surprise us. After all
> the fires in California, they've appeared (and established themselves) in
> isolated riparian patches on the Sacramento Valley floor where they would
> have had to cross two miles of nearly bare fields.
>
> Really interesting stuff!
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Jan 29, 2023 at 7:37 PM casey cunningham <redpeelingbark at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Tweeters,
>>
>> Yesterday i was on the north jetty rocks of the Columbia and heard a note
>> i couldn't identify that made me think of wrentits, and I remember someone
>> mentioning a possible wrentit at this location. The note reminds me of the
>> first note in their song and seemed to be coming from in the boulders. I'm
>> not saying it was a wrentit, just that it was wrentittian. Anyone know
>> this call? Am i forgetting something obvious?
>>
>> https://ebird.org/checklist/S127237513
>>
>> I couldn't get a view of the source and the only birds i saw on the rocks
>> nearby were two song sparrows.
>>
>> On another note, this morning there was a bullock's oriole in Long
>> Beach. More detail here:
>>
>> https://ebird.org/checklist/S127238468
>>
>> Casey Cunningham
>> Portland
>>
>>
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>
>
> --
> Steve Hampton
> Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)
>
>
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