I am a dummy....
I am a dummy....
I am a dummy....

Of course!   It’s not a reverse chart of nighttime noise.   It’s the fact that 
not all birds take off at dusk.   They build in numbers for a few hours before 
they are all in flight late at night.   This has to be at least most of the 
answer.

Here is our data for thrushes, warblers, and sparrows hourly counts.   So the 
push at the end of the day for thrushes is a faster call rate as they come 
down?  Remember this data is not adjusted for DST or for the nightly shift in 
start of dusk.   So for instance that shifts everything to the right some....so 
the last two hours are combined in some proportion of each.....oh heck, I just 
need to implement Jeffrey Butler’s solar calculator he found!   Not sure how 
that’s going to fit in the spreadsheets yet.

Michael, I can’t believe that there is a transmitter so small that it fits on 
thrushes!   Is the warbler one really yet?

How cool is that!

-Mike Farmer

From: David La Puma 
Sent: Friday, May 11, 2012 10:29 AM
To: NFC-L 
Subject: Re: [nfc-l] Austin, Tx - Hourly count - Through May 7, 2012

Jesse et al.

My thought was that birds are going to migrate for 100's of miles in a night- 
and so that time when they decide to take off they're probably operating under 
much more hard-wired behaviors. Get up in the sky, head in the intended 
direction, and go. I would assume that these birds would use their flight calls 
to see where other birds are in the atmosphere, but as long as conditions are 
good, there's probably a lot more room for them to just do their thing. Birds 
begin to really drop out of the radar after midnight, and many birds are out of 
the radar's view by 2am- and yet Mike's graph shows a spike in call rate about 
that time. This could be due to detection, as more birds drop to recordable 
altitude, but it could also be a time when birds are trying to assess their 
surroundings more, to see who's dropping out, whether it makes sense to push 
on, or whether there are concentrations already on the ground. That said, I've 
now seen some of Mike Lanzone's data and I believe call rate is probably driven 
most by density and secondarily by atmospheric conditions, and the lack of 
calls early on are probably due to the building numbers of birds in the 
atmosphere. Also interesting are how species groups (sparrows warblers and 
thrushes) parse out at different times of the night... clearly there are some 
group-specific mechanisms at play.

cheers

D 

________________________

David A. La Puma
Postdoctoral Associate 
Aeroecology Program
Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology
University of Delaware

Visiting Scientist
SILVIS Lab (http://silvis.forest.wisc.edu/)
University of Wisconsin, Madison

Teaching/Research Profile:
http://www.woodcreeper.com/teaching

Websites:
http://www.woodcreeper.com
http://badbirdz2.wordpress.com









On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 10:14 AM, Mike Farmer <[email protected]> wrote:

  Thanks everyone....I wish there was a central place for all your knowledge 
for us newbies to peruse.   It would make getting started easier....but maybe 
less fun in the floundering?

  I’ve had this discussion with a bunch of people just starting to record or 
who have given up after attempting to record.  It seems to be a naturally 
progression that newby’s like myself take.   First, we are amazed at how well 
the detectors will find such small packets of energy above the background 
noise.  Then we go into near depression because a beautiful OVEN bird zeep is 
some how missed.   Then horror that my big night of 500 calls could have been 
750 if I would just wade through 20,000 false positives instead of 3,000.

  The OLDBIRD detectors and Raven Pro detector....to name the only two I have 
used....are amazing detectors.   State of the art for what they do.   But the 
background noise is varying so rapidly and randomly that some calls are missed 
and false detection are many.   

  It is at this point that the newby must decide.   What am I trying to do?   
For me, I finally realized that I want as unbiased a sample of the birds 
calling over my house as I can get and I want a sufficient sample.    A good 
number, that is.   I’m not so concerned that I get every call that my mic hears 
as long as I don’t miss OVEN birds at a higher rate than CCSP, for instance.   
But I also don’t want just 10% of the calls because although that may be good 
enough for the many CCSP, it may not be enough OVEN birds calls to analysize.

  Notice that I said that I want an unbiased sample of the birds 
calling.....not that I am getting an unbiased sample of the birds flying over 
my house.   Sure, I would want that but apparently you professionals haven’t 
even determined what the call rate of each species is.  So we newbies have to 
realize that we are in no way counting how many birds fly over our house.   
Right?   Do I have that right?

  But when I read your professional papers and talk to the gurus like BIll 
Evans, I see that we can talk about changes in the proportion of the calls of 
each species.    At least until you professionals give us more ways to crunch 
the statistics.

  Sorry for the mini-rant.   I think newbies should be less frustrated by 
missed calls than we just naturally seem to be.   The pursuit of perfection 
should not be the enemy of the good.   

  -Mike Farmer
  -Oldbird and Raven Pro detectors are great....newbies, use them!

  From: Lewis Grove 
  Sent: Friday, May 11, 2012 8:26 AM
  To: Andrew Albright 
  Cc: Mike Farmer ; NFC-L 
  Subject: Re: [nfc-l] Austin, Tx - Hourly count - Through May 7, 2012

  Hi Andrew and all, 

  Automated detection of calls is a tricky business, though it is relatively 
easy to figure out the proportion of calls that you are actually pulling out - 
just count calls manually, screen by screen and then see how many your 
detectors find.  We looked at 90 different random 15-minute segments from three 
different recording sites, using multiple observers to find the total number of 
calls present.

  Basically, depending on the software package and the parameter combinations 
you use (SNR and occupancy are the big ones other than having your time and 
frequency bounds correct), you can get wildly different proportions, ranging 
from near zero to near 100% of calls.  I can't remember the exact numbers but I 
believe Tseep-x finds something just shy of 50% of the warbler/sparrow calls 
present in a file.  Other factors come in to play here too - background noise 
(insects) particularly.

  Hopefully all of this data (there's a lot) will someday see the light of day 
in a journal - it's overdue.

  Lewis



  On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 8:19 AM, Andrew Albright <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Mike - I enjoy reading your reports, so keep 'em coming!

    I'm no expert, but I think when I asked the question before it seems
    that the general idea is that nfc are easier to detect in the first
    couple of hours and then around dawn as birds will be flying at lower
    elevations (and they can get so high that you can't detect nfc).  But
    I don't know how much data supports this hypothesis and it's quite
    possible that it's from East Cost migration which could be
    significantly different from that seen in Texas.

    I have one question - have you ever gone through an hour or a night of
    your data to see/hear how well the automatic detection works?
    Also, what % of nfc can you not assign to a certain species?

    Sincerely,
    Andrew


    On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 4:15 PM, Mike Farmer <[email protected]> wrote:
    > Since March 1, our Austin city station has recorded 4250 night calls.   
The
    > quieter station 10 miles to the west had 6372.   See the attached graph
    > showing the number of calls per hour of the night.  This is for the quiet
    > station.
    >
    > This chart seems rather too convenient.  I am suspicious of it.  What is
    > known about this kind of timing?  The curve matches the inverse of the
    > relative quiet of a typical night.   Life is just quieter in the middle of
    > the night.   So can’t a lot of this be a detector and noise effect?   Or 
do
    > the birds actually fly and call more in the middle of the night?
    >
    > Also this data doesn’t adjust for daylight savings shift in the third week
    > of March or the fact that dusk shifts to later times as spring progresses.
    > What we really want to plot is the hour after dusk not the actual time.  
But
    > has anyone here figured out a formula for the number of minutes each night
    > that dusk shifts?  You can google this and get a bunch of graphs but there
    > must be a formula ..... probably involving a bunch of cosines and other
    > witchcraft?
    >
    > -Mike Farmer
    >
    >
    > equipment
    >
    > Mic – Oldbird 21c
    >
    > Software – Oldbird tseep, thrush, GlassOFire, Raven Pro, Excel
    >
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  -- 

  Lewis Grove
  PhD Student, Wildlife Ecology 
  President, Graduate Student Association

  SUNY Environmental Science and Forestry

  (814) 880 - 5667


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