Outdoor Ontario

Request for Information => Bird ID => Topic started by: shorebird on April 14, 2010, 12:19:16 PM

Title: among red-winged blackbirds, a weird sound
Post by: shorebird on April 14, 2010, 12:19:16 PM
I checked out a shrubby field (this is in Toronto) where there were a lot of red-winged blackbirds singing, but I also heard this weird song or call coming from a small tree -- it had a high note first, and afterwards a sound that came vaguely like a red-winged blackbird's, "konk-a-lee!" trill, but softer, more subdued, and somehow not quite "right". It repeated this sound many times -- a high sharp note, then the vaguely soft red-wing-like trill.

When I looked there was some black bird singing in the tree, and it didn't seem like a red-winged blackbird -- it was all black but I couldn't see a wing patch at all. I thought maybe it was some aberrant red-wing that couldn't sing properly or something. Later, though, I heard the same sounds coming from elsewhere in a tree. I also saw a lot (3-5) of black birds that were in a tree and it seemed like similar sounds were coming from them. I'm aware that common grackle, cowbird and starlings exist, but what I heard didn't sound like any of those I've heard.

I'm wondering, are there variants of red-winged blackbird songs that could explain this? Or (this is an explanation that would be consistent with the colour and that I'm leaning toward) do younger, less mature red-wings sing differently and I'm seeing those? What is up with this "weird" blackbird song? I don't know of any black-coloured mimics around.
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Post by: mr.sharp-photo on April 14, 2010, 04:36:51 PM
i heard some strange sounds coming from some RWBB yesterday.
Title: sounds
Post by: jerjack on April 14, 2010, 08:14:06 PM
only thing  that comes to my mind is a starling, they are great mimickers,located  one  one day whilst painting  a house  and it  blew  me away, was  mimicking  bird songs  and  noises
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Post by: Halton Hills on April 15, 2010, 06:32:17 AM
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Male Cowbird perhaps ?

Sometimes the female is well hidden as one or more males do they're courtship ritual.

http://ibc.lynxeds.com/video/brown-head ... ing-female (http://ibc.lynxeds.com/video/brown-headed-cowbird-molothrus-ater/adult-male-displaying-responding-female)


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