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There are three different songs here sung by a Western Meadowlark. The first repeats three times, the second song repeats 4 times, and the third song is repeated three times. This was recorded on Marble Hot Springs Road at the 2nd 90 degree turn as the Meadowlark sang from the telephone wire above. In the background you will hear cows moo and a few other birds call as well, but the Western Meadowlark is clearly the focal subject of the recording. This was recorded with a Fostex FR-2 and Sennheiser shotgun microphone, ME66.
The photo attached is a spectrogram of Western Meadowlark made in Raven Pro.
(taxonomy:binomial="Sturnella neglecta")
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Western Meadlowlarks spend the Winter around here, as do Eastern Meadowlarks. The only reliable way to tell them apart is by their song. In fact, it was because their songs are so different that they were considered a different species! The Eastern Meadlowlark's song is composed of high pitched whistles, and sounds nothing like this gurgly guy, who was recorded in May 1999 near the Salinas River of Central California.
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Central Arizona, 50 miles from other central Arizona sample.
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A bird mutters to himself in a "whisper song" that bears little relation to the other sounds this species makes - sung from atop a power pole near Cornville, Arizona, 5/99.
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Description: English: High-pass filtering applied. bird-seen:yes playback-used:no Common name: Western Meadowlark Type: adult, call, song Genus: Sturnella Species: neglecta Location: Santa Teresa County Park (near San Jose), Santa Clara County, California Country: United States Elevation: 220 m. Date: 26 April 2020, 08:30. Source: Metadata:
https://www.xeno-canto.org/550994 Audio file:
https://www.xeno-canto.org/550994/download. Author: Peter Wilton. Object location
37° 12′ 36″ N, 121° 48′ 09.36″ W View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 37.210000; -121.802600. xeno-cantoSharing bird soundsfrom around the world : The source of this file is
xeno-canto.org, a website dedicated to sharing birdsong recordings created and donated by volunteers. The website is managed by the Xeno-canto Foundation.
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same or compatible license as the original. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 CC BY-SA 4.0 Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 truetrue.
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