Bird Language
Bird Language: A Path to Awareness
by Alexia Stevens
From www.NatureSkills.com
Listening to birds allows us to become aware of animal activity, to sneak up on wildlife or unsuspecting friends, and to enhance our senses. In my year at Wilderness Awareness School’s Residential Program, in Duval, Washington, I explored the school’s teachings about birds and awareness. I’ll share some of bird language basics with you. Soon, you’ll be able to tell when a hawk is about to fly out of the trees or when a deer is sneaking away from you.
What is bird language?
Birds make noises to communicate with each other, and we can learn to understand what they are “talking” about. Patience and observation are really all it takes, even though a field guide will come in handy. You don’t have to identify birds in order to understand their voices. As you get to know the birds around you, you will be able to intuit their language, the same way you can tell when a close friend is happy or upset just from how that person answers the phone.
You might not need to know the names of the birds, but you should know something about their habits in order to understand their voices. The birds with the most to say about other animals traveling on the ground are the birds that live on the ground. A tiny warbler or chickadee, up in the treetops, might not care if a coyote is traveling underneath it, but a song sparrow will certainly notice when a coyote is passing through.
The predator is traveling right through the sparrow’s home in the thicket! The general rule is that small brown birds that live near the ground will tell you the most. There are a lot of birds out there, but don’t start out by trying to learn them all. The perching birds, known as the passerines, have the most reliable voices. These are birds like sparrows, wrens, or blackbirds. In contrast, woodpeckers, herons, ducks, or hawks are not passerines.
Here’s the short list of helpful birds:
American robin (Turdus migratorius), song sparrow (Melospiza melodia), dark-eyed junco (Junco hyemalis), a local wren, and a local towhee. If any of these birds doesn’t live near you, follow the general rule about finding perching birds that forage on the ground. The first owl or house cat that ventures into your backyard will show you the birds to pay attention to.
You will have to gauge the “trustworthiness” of your birds. The species above are reliable, but jays or crows, in the corvid family, can lead you astray with their seemingly random squawking. I snuck up on a yelling jay family, only to hear them shut up completely when they caught sight of me. I still think they were pulling my leg.
Despite their unpredictability, you can use crows and jays to find owls and hawks. Corvids seem to have a special dislike for these predators, so a stationary mob of noisy crows might indicate a raptor.
When you have found your five reliable ground-feeding passerines, you can start to distinguish the vocalizations they use in different situations. It’s the same concept as being able to tell the difference between someone yelling for help and someone singing.
Here are the five basic “voices” that birds use, as Jon Young outlines in his “Language of the Birds” cassette. Most bird noises will fall into these categories. The first four are baseline, or business-as-usual voices, and the last one is about alarm.
Song is the best-known noise that birds make. Male birds sing a lot in the spring, and sometimes all year round. If a bird is relaxed and safe enough to be singing, there probably aren’t any predators nearby. The song is the vocalization usually heard on bird identification tapes, and you may see the bird singing from an exposed perch.
Companion calling is the second voice of the birds. These are the sounds that birds make to keep track of their flock mates or “spouses.” Usually it’s a dialogue of soft chips or tweets. Translated into human speech, it might be akin to the calm murmur of voices in a restaurant. The rhythm is conversational and regular. You might see a pair of towhees flicking their tails periodically as a visual signal to each other, or a flock of robins moving in unison, making soft whistles.
The third voice is juvenile begging, and it’s usually heard in the springtime when baby birds have turned into hungry teenagers. The parents feed them, because if they don’t shut these babies up, a predator will hear them. While the young bird’s cries may sound strangled and horrible, that’s just the sound of another juicy morsel being shoved down the hatch. Most baby birds flutter their wings and open their beaks wide as they plead for food. The repetitive whining may be obnoxious, but don’t mistake it for distress.
The fourth voice, aggression, also sounds gruesome but it does not indicate a predator in the area. You might have observed two male robins or mockingbirds staking their claims to opposite sides of the yard. There is plenty of flapping and squawking, but other birds don’t pay attention. Sometimes female birds will help their mates defend territory, so this behavior isn’t confined to males.
We’re about to hear the fifth voice, alarm. Look at the lawn, the park, the forest, or the field where all the birds are singing and feeding. That is baseline. Now a hawk flies over, a jogger comes through, or a bobcat creeps from behind a bush. The birds cross from comfort into distress, and you will notice behavior that is not like their relaxed feeding or preening. The actual noise the bird makes may not be very different from its companion call, but the emotion behind it will feel agitated rather than calm.
A song sparrow might be up out of its thicket, chipping nervously. Maybe a flock of robins will squeal and dive for cover, telling you that a sharp-shinned hawk is on the prowl. Certain behaviors, like wiping the bill on a branch, can also signal agitation. Recognizing baseline is essential for being able to recognize alarm.
Different animals and events will cause different alarm sequences, so it can be difficult to determine what each bird is actually responding to. Your common sense is the best guide for deciphering the birds’ reactions. For instance, a predator on the ground will cause birds to move up farther than that predator can jump, while an aerial predator like a hawk will cause the birds to dive down into cover.
With practice, and knowledge of your local wildlife, bird language will indicate what kind of predator is causing the disturbance. Think of how each kind of animal moves. A bobcat or housecat that slinks along will collect a little following of alarmed birds. The sound of the alarms will travel slowly through the forest as some birds join in and others leave as the cat moves through their territories. A fast-moving dog or coyote will cause birds to “popcorn” up, just a few birds at a time popping up and alarming. A perched owl or hawk will draw a mob of calling birds that stay in one place. A bird-eating hawk, like the sharp-shinned, Cooper’s or goshawk, will cause a dramatic duck-and-cover disappearing act.
Interestingly, bird responses to humans seem to vary. If you are using bird language to detect approaching humans, you must factor in the habitat and the attitude of the person. Are you in a park where the birds are used to people? Is the person stomping along in a bad mood, or strolling without a care in the world?
I tried to move quietly and sneakily out to my bird watching spot, only to hear towhees and robins make unflattering comments about me—“Who is this person sneaking around here?” Now I stroll in whistling a tune, and the birds seem more relaxed. After all, I am exhibiting baseline behavior.
It’s not uncommon for birds to be quiet around feeding deer, but then start to alarm when the deer begins sneaking away. Perhaps the deer is sneaking away from you as you are coming down the trail, so listen for these peripheral or secondary bird alarms. The more you can expand your hearing and awareness, the more you will be able to see and experience.
Check out the Advanced Bird Language cd's as well.
Alexia Stevens is an avid naturalist and birder. She is a Kamana instructor with Wilderness Awareness School and teaches bird language at their Residential Program. She is also a farmer of sorts, a bee keeper, a spinner and weaver.
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