I have the iBird Pro phone app on my mobile phone. IBird Pro provides eastern and western version sound clips of Warbling Vireo. On my recent trip to Colorado, at one mountain location, with a presumed western Warbling Vireo singing from Ponderosa Pines, I played the eastern version song. The songster immediately became interested and flew close and changed the speed of its song to match what was coming out of my mobile phone. Out at Tamarack Ranch in eastern Colorado, I played western Warbling Vireo songs to presumed eastern Warbling Vireos. Same thing, one local songster slightly changed its tune. I do not have sound recording equipment to document any of this. Other birders might try this. What does this mean? Does it mean that perhaps Homo sapiens hears and reads more into slight song variations than Vireo gilvus does? Giving a listen to geographic differences on Xeno-canto website reveals that speed and upward vs downward inflections are variable across eastern and western locations. I know there are other criteria for citing differences such as molt timing between eastern and western representatives of Warbling Vireos, but this song playback experiment should be tried by birders in other parts of the range of this potential species split. I will be in Illinois next week maybe I plan to test the song fidelity of vireos there. I am more impressed by how Spotted Towhees songs in Colorado sound dramatically different than birds from California. Do Spotted Towhees sound different on the west slope vs front range?
Bruce Webb Granite Bay, California On Jun 10, 6:34 am, Andrew Spencer <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all, > > Just a quick note on the Warbling Vireo complex - there has been a lot of > suggestion recently that the best way to tell the two groups apart by song > is by the inflection of the final note. But as Bob's email, and other, > point out, there is a lot of variability on this and it really isn't the > most useful characteristic. The best way, in my opinion, to tell a western > Warbling Vireo from an eastern, is the pacing of the song and the > distribution of the high notes. In western the high notes are more evenly > distributed throughout, giving the song a more choppy feel and making it > sound less sing-songy. The length of the individual strophes is highly > variable. I even recorded one a few weeks ago in Routt County (a western > type) that was singing nearly unbroked for 10 or more seconds! > > I wrote a short blog post about this subject a while ago on the earbirding > blog, so if any of you would like more info check it > out:http://earbirding.com/blog/archives/3667. > > Andrew Spencer > Centennial, CO > > > > > > > > On Sat, Jun 9, 2012 at 8:20 PM, Bob's Email <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi > > > Recently there has been exciting chatter that Colorado could be the home > > for both the "eastern" and "western" populations of the Warbling Vireo. > > Further speculation implies these two populations may reflect two different > > Warbling Vireo species! Within the eastern and western populations there > > are intermediate populations, thereby causing extreme difficultly in > > physical identification for each group. It has been suggested that the > > best way to separate the two groups is by song, the western group > > apparently ending its song on an upward inflection and the eastern on a > > downward inflection. Downward-inflected songs have been noted on the > > eastern plains, leading to the assumption that the eastern group may be > > present in that region. On a recent family trip encircling the West Elk > > Mountains in Gunnison, Montrose, and Delta counties, I decided to don my > > citizen scientist sun hat and see what the Warbling Vireo sounded like in > > that region of the state. > > > A usual pattern of their song began to emerge. Frequently the song would > > consist of two sequences, the first sequence ending on an upward inflection > > and the second sequence ending on a downward inflection or a > > neutrally-inflected note. In addition, the song would often consist of one > > sequence ending with an upward inflection, and infrequently the song would > > include just one sequence that ended on a downward inflection. Sometimes > > the song of either sequence would be sung repeatedly of just one sequence > > or the other. > > > So what can be learned from this brief experiment in citizen science that > > produced a mixed message about the sound of the western population of > > Warbling Vireo? Does the variation in the sequence of the Warbling Vireo > > song represent a normal pattern of variation within the species and with > > each of the Vireo's two populations? > > Does the variation in the song pattern reflect a phase of the Vireo's > > phenology as it does with some other species where the song pattern and > > length changes depending on if the bird is in territorial, breeding, or > > after breeding mode? Could time of day indicate what song variation is > > being sung? > > > There seems to be a lot more that is unknown than known, and we in > > Colorado could contribute be being alert to what song is being sung when > > and where. > > > Bob Righter > > Denver, CO > > > Sent from my iPad > > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > > "Colorado Birds" group. > > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > [email protected]. > > For more options, visit this group at > >http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado Birds" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en.
