Today, I sent the following message to NFC-L, regarding a meager but 
interesting night flight last night over Etna, NY.

The files of the Black-billed Cuckoo night flight calls (Sounds like a dry or 
wooden rattle: "Kruk-uk-uk"), that were attached to the original message, can 
be obtained here:

http://www.mail-archive.com/nfc-l@cornell.edu/msg00722.html

Good birding!

Sincerely,
Chris T-H

--
Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
TARU Product Line Manager and Field Applications Engineer
Bioacoustics Research Program, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, New York 14850
W: 607-254-2418   M: 607-351-5740   F: 607-254-1132
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/brp


From: bounce-55779067-9327...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-55779067-9327...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Christopher T. 
Tessaglia-Hymes
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 12:15 PM
To: NFC-L
Subject: [nfc-l] Night Migration - 6-7 May 2012 - Relatively Quiet

Last night, I *finally* got my Evans-style flowerpot microphone (Knowles 
Element EK3029c) back up on the roof (Etna, NY) and recorded from about 10:00pm 
to 5:00am, as a dry run. Early this morning, I quickly browsed through my 
sounds, looking for anything of interest. WeatherTAP showed very strong 
reflectivity early last night to the WSW of Ithaca, NY, but nothing that would 
dump huge quantities of birds into our local area.

Highlights from the night include:

1 Black-throated Green Warbler (in full song at 10:13pm)
2 Black-throated Blue Warblers
1 Chipping Sparrow
1 White-throated Sparrow
1 Black-crowned Night-Heron (02:16am)
1 Virginia Rail (04:11am)
2 Black-billed Cuckoos (one at 02:19am and one at 04:14am; attached audio file: 
120507_16-bit Black-billed Cuckoos.wav)
1 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
3 Ovenbird-like upsweeps (not Ovenbirds)
1 Indigo Bunting

There was one call that I find very strange. It is about 18ms in duration, 
descending; the frequency range is 16.17kHz to 17.99kHz. It is inaudible 
without slowing it down. It doesn't quite sound right for Flying Squirrel, of 
which we have visiting the feeders at times, but even those are somewhat 
audible in the recordings. This note is completely inaudible and there are no 
other reference sounds around it in time. I'm a bit baffled. If anyone has any 
ideas, I'd appreciate it. The sound is attached: 120507.023016_16-bit_17kHz 
Seep.wav. You can use software such as Raven to slow it down and view it 
spectrographically - I have removed the LF band of peepers and other ambient 
noise and amplified the signal.

Lastly, there was a single distant, but close-enough truck backing up in the 
silence of the night. I really thought I had recorded a Saw-whet Owl. Upon 
reviewing the entire clip series, it is indeed a just-out-of-earshot truck 
backing up. There were very few other reference sounds to easily identify it as 
the backup beeps of a truck. But, what the heck is a service truck doing out at 
03:00am? Do dump trucks really operate that early in the outskirts of Ithaca?

Nice diversity, very quiet night, though.

I look forward to recording again tonight, even though it will be raining - 
South winds are in the forecast for us - we'll see.

Sincerely,
Chris T-H

--
Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
TARU Product Line Manager and Field Applications Engineer
Bioacoustics Research Program, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, New York 14850
W: 607-254-2418   M: 607-351-5740   F: 607-254-1132
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/brp


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