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Transcript:
This is BirdNote!
The musical, wren-like song you just heard is that of a Lesser Yellowlegs, a type of sandpiper. We know Lesser Yellowlegs and other sandpipers for their busy foraging on mudflats and at the ocean鈥檚 edge鈥攂ut perhaps not for their singing.
Now, picture this bird, in its nesting territory in Alaska, sitting atop a spruce tree. That鈥檚 right鈥攁 sandpiper perched at the top of a tree like our backyard robins鈥攕inging its caroling song.
The name 鈥渟andpiper鈥 actually comes from the birds鈥 voices, rather than from their long-billed probing in the sand. While the name refers in particular to the birds鈥 short 鈥減iped" or whistled calls, a number of sandpipers are also superior, and surprising, singers. Listen to this Dunlin as it sings in flight over its nesting territory in the Alaskan tundra.
And this eerie hooting, which might conjure up the image of an owl at night, is actually the song of a Pectoral Sandpiper, singing on the tundra well north of the Arctic Circle.
You can hear these sandpipers again, and see photos, when you come to our website, . I鈥檓 Mary McCann.
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Credits:
Bird Sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Lesser Yellowlegs recorded by G.A. Keller. Dunlin recorded by A.A. Allen and P.P. Kellogg. Pectoral Sandpiper display flight recorded by W.W.H. Gunn.
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
Narrator: Mary McCann
Written by Bob Sundstrom
漏 2014 Tune In to Nature.org May 2018