to start April 15.
Laura Gooch
- Forwarded Message
From: David La Puma
To: NFC-L
Sent: Mon, April 2, 2012 11:54:49 PM
Subject: [nfc-l] roll call!
Can we get an update on where people are recording this spring? Is anyone
recording in Wisconsin or elsewhere in the Upper Midwest? We've had
it as an MP3 file and broken it into two pieces to keep the size
within the listserv
limits. Part 2 will be in a separate email. The two parts overlap at the
(very obvious) chatter/click call. If anyone would like the .wav file, I'd be
happy to send it
along.
Thanks,
Laura Gooch
--
NFC-L
haven't had time to
look at the thrush frequencies yet.
Laura Gooch
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
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Chris,
Thanks! This kind of thing is very useful to those of us on the lower reaches
of the learning curve.
Laura
--- On Thu, 10/4/12, Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes wrote:
From: Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
Subject: [nfc-l] Gray-cheeked Thrush Examples
To: "NFC-L"
Date: Thursday,
Can anyone offer any suggestions as to what this call that showed up at my
house about 4:30 this morning might be? It's not a very good recording, I'm
afraid, but it seems pretty distinctive.
Thanks,
Laura
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I don't have enough years of data to say anything veryuseful about night calls
during migration here (east side of Cleveland, Ohio). However, I do know that
we had a very light spring banding season. I believe that the banding season at
Black Swamp Bird Observatory, on the south shore of Lake
My own impression from northeast Ohio is that the breeding bird population is
fairly normal, with an apparent lack of Scarlet Tanager. I checked with a
couple of friends who are involved with different kinds of breeding bird
surveys, and their impressions are the same as mine.
Laura Gooch
.
Laura Gooch
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l@cornell.edu
>>Sent: Monday, October 7, 2013 3:41 PM
>>Subject: [nfc-l] More on processing night flight calls
>>
>>
>>
>>Hi All,
>>As a follow-up to Debbie’s question about processing night flight calls with
>>Raven Pro, I recall that Laura Gooch rec
I finally "finished" analyzing my night flight call data from last fall.
Results for those interested are posted here:
http://listeningup.wordpress.com/summary-of-night-flight-calls-detected/
The "calls detected by species" link includes tables of calls detected. I wish
I was more confident in
information.
Laura Gooch
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
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On Monday, May 16, 2016 10:32 AM, Laura Gooch wrote:
Jerald,
I'll second Chris here. This looks like a more classic "double-banded up" group
(Nashville, Tennessee, Orange-crowned, etc.) to me, rather than an Ovenbird.
Are you familiar with the 2014 paper by Sanders a
Folks,
This has been bothering me for quite a while... I get a significant number of
the calls illustrated in this clip from the night of 29-30 August, 2016, and
the Cleveland Lakefront Nature Preserve (about 0.3 km from the south shore of
Lake Erie, east side of Cleveland). The only thing that
Folks,
I haven't had time to look at my recordings much, so I have no counts to share.
My home recording station has very prominent insect song, so that I get
thousands of false hits, making screening time-consuming. However, I do know
that we had significant thrush movement the night of
Jay's suggestion is a good one, when possible given how folks are making
recordings. One note to Ken and others: I almost always listen to NFCs at
quarter speed, with a filter on so that I only hear the frequency range of the
call (and not the low frequency stuff that would blast my ears at
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