Hi Jeff and all,

Thanks for your feed back.  It is getting more interesting!  I just looked at 
the data of Sep 21 2015 when I recorded over thousand calls.  As Jeff mentioned 
it peaked around 2 am.

As for Swainsons Thrushes, I have been recording very few calls or no calls at 
all, when some other people in my locality have been reporting lots of them. 
Just as crow flies a mile down stream from me from Schoellkopf's  stadium 
someone recorded several of them the other night.  So it seems it is very 
interesting.


I will look at my data from last year's sometimes soon.


So what makes them to peak at different times on different days?  Does it 
denote from where and how long they have been making their journey?


BTW, Jeff I still have your bug book. If send me your mailing address I will 
mail it to you.


Cheers

Meena


Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
42.429007,-76.47111
http://www.haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/
Ithaca area moths: https://plus.google.com/118047473426099383469/posts
Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf





________________________________
From: Jeff Wells <jeffwe...@borealbirds.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2016 1:01 PM
To: Jim Danzenbaker; Jerald
Cc: Caitlin Coberly; Meena Madhav Haribal; NFC-L
Subject: RE: [nfc-l] Intersting pattern in data recording


A few years ago, a then undergraduate at Colby College here in Maine named Andy 
McEvoy used two of my nocturnal flight call datasets in his Senior Honors 
Thesis. The locations were from Deline, Northwest Territories from Fall 2006 
and from Lesser Slave Lake Bird Observatory, Alberta from Fall 2007.



Attached is an image from Andy’s thesis  showing graphs of how many times in 
each season a particular hour after sunset recorded the peak number of calls. 
It was not the same every night.



Jeff Wells



From: bounce-120756138-12790...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-120756138-12790...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Jim Danzenbaker
Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 12:16 PM
To: Jerald
Cc: Caitlin Coberly; Meena Madhav Haribal; NFC-L
Subject: Re: [nfc-l] Intersting pattern in data recording



All,



Out here in southwestern Washington State, I have a steady flow of very vocal 
Swainson's Thrushes flying over every night.  Like others on this list serve, 
I've noted that the number of calls increasing dramatically about an hour or so 
before dawn.  I've often wondered if they are calling this commonly all night 
and are just more easily heard as they descend or whether they call more 
frequently near dawn.



Keeping my eyes and ears skyward.



Jim Danzenbaker

Battle Ground, WA



On Tue, Sep 6, 2016 at 9:01 AM, Jerald 
<jrebel...@gmail.com<mailto:jrebel...@gmail.com>> wrote:

In Delaware, my calls steadily increase throughout the night, peaking about an 
hour and a half before sunrise (4:45-5:00 approximately).



On Tue, Sep 6, 2016 at 11:45 AM, Caitlin Coberly 
<prai...@dswebnet.com<mailto:prai...@dswebnet.com>> wrote:

Recording in central Michigan, my calls were peaking at about 4:00 AM—right by 
the shores of Lake Huron.  My guess is that is when they are flying low and 
looking to land.  I’d have to look at my old data, but I think my inland 
recorders (not near woodlots) did not see the same peak.  Fall and spring were 
very different as well.







From: 
bounce-120754960-10103...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-120754960-10103...@list.cornell.edu>
 
[mailto:bounce-120754960-10103...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-120754960-10103...@list.cornell.edu>]
 On Behalf Of Meena Madhav Haribal
Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 5:48 AM
To: NFC-L
Subject: [nfc-l] Intersting pattern in data recording



Hi all,

I have been recording in Ithaca NY for last few days. I am finding an 
interesting pattern in number of calls recorded per hour (between 9.00 pm to 
5.30 am). My recordings of the calls peak around 3.00 am in the morning. So I 
am not sure why that pattern. Whether that is the time when they are ready to 
touch down so they fly low in search of good locations or something else is 
happening? I am curious to know how others are finding. If any Ithaca recorders 
are out there have you looked at the pattern? Bill Evans who has been recording 
form Danby area in Ithaca sent me a pattern for one day and that day it peaked 
around 1.00 am and it also at higher elevation of 1500 ft, while I am at at 821 
feet.



Here is the actual data.





[cid:image001.png@01D2083E.184475A0]



Any thoughts are welcome!





Meena Haribal

Ithaca NY 14850

42.429007,-76.47111, 821 ft

http://www.haribal.org/

http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/

Ithaca area moths: https://plus.google.com/118047473426099383469/posts

Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf









________________________________

From: 
bounce-120754645-10061...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-120754645-10061...@list.cornell.edu>
 
<bounce-120754645-10061...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-120754645-10061...@list.cornell.edu>>
 on behalf of John Kearney 
<john.kear...@ns.sympatico.ca<mailto:john.kear...@ns.sympatico.ca>>
Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2016 7:09 AM
To: 'Preston Lust'; NFC-L
Subject: RE: [nfc-l] Interesting Call



Hi Preston and all,

I downloaded the calls you sent. The first one is a “double-up” warbler mostly 
likely one in the genus Oreothlypis (Nashville, Tennessee, and Orange-crowned). 
I would lean toward Tennessee for this one due to the nice bend in the 
spectrogram. When I first looked at the second call, I thought it was a 
Magnolia Warbler due to the spacing between humps, but on closer examination 
its high frequency, number of humps, depth between humps, and somewhat 
descending character fit better with Cape May Warbler.

John



John Kearney

Carleton, Nova Scotia



From: 
bounce-120753747-28417...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-120753747-28417...@list.cornell.edu>
 [mailto:bounce-120753747-28417...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Preston Lust
Sent: September-05-16 20:58
To: nf...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:nf...@list.cornell.edu>
Subject: [nfc-l] Interesting Call



Night of 9/01-02/16; Westport, Connecticut



I recorded an interesting call that night (the night of a small cold front), 
and was wondering if anyone could aid me in its identification. Thank you for 
any input.

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Jim Danzenbaker
Battle Ground, WA
360-702-9395
jdanzenba...@gmail.com<mailto:jdanzenba...@gmail.com>

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