ML605257521
hummingbird sp. Trochilidae sp.
Beitragende/r
Datum
Ort
- Alter und Geschlecht
- Geschlecht unbekannt, Alter unbekannt - 6
- Tonaufnahmen
- Ruf
- Klangattrappe
- keine Klangattrappe benutzt
Kommentare
I can definitely hear a hummingbird wing buzzing sound at 20 seconds and again at 21 seconds - this was when one flew right by me. I thought the series of high pitched squeaks were coming from the hummingbirds and I hear them throughout the recording: 0-3, 11, 15-17, 30-36. They reminded me of the final set of calls for Allen's Hummingbird on All About Birds (https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/6180 - 27-28s, 49-50s), though I've heard Anna's and Ruby-throated give squeaky calls as well (but less up and down, I thought) and have no experience distinguishing hummingbirds by sound. I also hear a chirps at 24 and a few seconds thereafter that sound like a hummingbird.
Beobachtungsdetails
Saw several whitish and greenish hummingbirds around the same tree as the Acorn Woodpeckers, a large oak tree not far down the trail from the base of the stairs. One came quite close briefly, but I didn't get a good look. Merlin iDed as Allen's, but I couldn't verify that visually and I was not certain about the audio at the time. I've now processed the audio and it seems consistent (BirdNet agrees as well) with Allen's Hummingbird, which as far as I understand is not common but is expected in this area at this time. Update: per feedback from reviewer, I've changed this to Anna's Hummingbird as Allen's would be late and this audio does not support Allen's or Rufous over Anna's. Update 2: Changing back to hummingbird sp. because I didn't see them well enough to make an ID visually and reviewer said he heard no hummingbird on audio. I heard the hummingbirds at the time and believe I hear them on the audio, but I'm no expert and am just going to update the file with my notes per eBird guidelines.
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Technische Angaben
- Aufnahmegerät
- Pixel 6
- Mikrofon
- Zubehör
- Größe der Originaldatei
- 3.31 MB