Learn 15 Common Sparrow Songs (Eastern North America)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • Sparrows can be difficult to identify, especially when they are hidden by branches or grasses. Thankfully, they can also be identified by their song. Learn how to identify 15 sparrows of Eastern North America by song.
    Gear Links (As Amazon Associates we do earn from qualifying purchases)
    Panasonic LUMIX FZ80 4K Digital Camera
    Used for most bird videos) - check credits as we do source some photos/videos elsewhere which is noted in the description
    amzn.to/3GZl3Mu
    Cayer FP2450 Fluid Head Tripod, 75 inches Aluminium Tripod
    Derek's lighter tripod
    amzn.to/3suX5CK
    Andoer Video Tripod Aluminum Alloy 67 Inch
    Derek's heavier tripod
    amzn.to/3uRLTTk
    Nikon D5300
    Derek's vlogging and macro camera
    amzn.to/3HF8jeh
    Rode VideoMicPro Compact Directional On-Camera Microphone
    Derek's external microphone for Nikon D5300
    amzn.to/3oH8YnS
    Connect with us!
    badgerlandbirding.wordpress.com
    / badgerlandbirding
    / badgerlandbirding
    / badgerlandbirding \
    Thanks to Xeno Canto, where the following audio recordings were collected under CC by 4.0
    xeno-canto.org/
    All recordings by Jonathon Jongsma (edited)
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Song Sparrow and White-throated Sparrow in cover image and slide by N. Lewis (Public Domain, edited)
    White-crowned Sparrow in cover image and slide by Jim Hudgins (Public Domain, edited)
    Harris's Sparrow image by Tom Koerner (Public Domain, edited)
    Vesper, Swamp, and Lincoln's Sparrow images by Alan Schmierer (Public Domain, edited)
    All other photos and videos by Derek and Ryan Sallmann
    #Birding #BirdWatching #BadgerlandBirding

Комментарии • 66

  • @BadgerlandBirding
    @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +11

    Note: House Sparrows are no longer considered weaver finches. They’re a member of the Old World Sparrows now.

    • @thelavens8330
      @thelavens8330 11 месяцев назад +3

      House sparrows have always been true sparrows (defined as genus Passer and close relatives), it's just that where their group best sits within the perching birds has changed. True sparrows have never been weaver finches any more than new world sparrows have been buntings.
      Fantastic video otherwise

    • @CHIBItheSPARROW
      @CHIBItheSPARROW 7 месяцев назад

      @@thelavens8330
      Came here to say this exact thing :)
      And I agree, great video.

  • @sanctusthree
    @sanctusthree Год назад +12

    I just heard a white throated sparrow outside my window and felt compelled to try to look up its song to identify it. Thanks for the great info!

    • @loveiconartshop
      @loveiconartshop 3 месяца назад +4

      Me too! It’s the most beautiful song!

    • @HaloHighlightz
      @HaloHighlightz 3 месяца назад +3

      I’m here because of the white throated sparrow as well

  • @redactedredacted8434
    @redactedredacted8434 3 месяца назад +7

    White throated sparrow! I heard it's song and had to look it up. It sounded like someone was whistling a song. Thanks

  • @RoyceMarcus
    @RoyceMarcus Год назад +13

    Sparrows always tricky! But easy to recognize the winter White Throated Sparrows - one of my favorite winter birds.

  • @midnightcoffee6463
    @midnightcoffee6463 2 месяца назад +5

    I had a musical session with a couple of White-Throated Sparrows earlier today

  • @quickworks9720
    @quickworks9720 Год назад +5

    The white throated sparrow. So that’s who sings that song! Thanks for clearing this up for me!!! Been trying to figure it out forever!

  • @BK-db3gc
    @BK-db3gc Год назад +14

    Thank so much. Identification by song or call is hard to learn. Your segments focusing on aural birding are a big help. Just learning the correct vocabulary used to accurately describe bird sounds is an important part of the learning process. Much appreciated, thanks.

  • @JD27770
    @JD27770 Год назад +15

    Just getting in to birding and you’re my favorite channel so far!

    • @muttleyinlove8648
      @muttleyinlove8648 Год назад +2

      These guys do produce excellent videos. I have learned a lot from them. Enjoy your birdwatching!!

  • @BarbaraM-lv7pe
    @BarbaraM-lv7pe 7 дней назад

    Thank you so much for the Sparrow series. I used to hear a musical call 50 years ago in the spring. It always made me smile, as I knew pleasant weather was coming. I’m in central MD and grew up on a creek on the western shore of the Bay. I wondered if it was a Bachman’s sparrow (it was not) or another threatened species because I only heard it for a few springs as a child and never heard it again 😔. I’d lived in that house for over 25 years, so had been listening a while.

  • @nancywhite2014
    @nancywhite2014 Год назад +5

    Excellent instructional video! Several of these species are in western New York. Some of my favorites are the juncos, chipping sparrows and song sparrows. Thanks for sharing the variety of sparrow calls.

  • @lyndastarorypinski6671
    @lyndastarorypinski6671 Год назад +3

    This is an excellent podcast very easy to learn from. Thank you!

  • @hibbs1712
    @hibbs1712 2 месяца назад

    I’ve got a few different flocks of house sparrows that come through and also a duet of cardinals but the White Crowned Sparrow I saw today was amazing. Beautiful and striking crown. I’ve been hearing their songs in the evening too, so it was nice to see their song and face together in this video :)

  • @MelanieCorrigall
    @MelanieCorrigall 2 месяца назад +1

    I've been hearing a call I haven't heard before for days now. Figured it was a sparrow of some type, but which one! Your video reminded me of seeing a white crowned sparrow a while ago, and confirmed it's ID. Thanks for helping solving the mystery!

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  2 месяца назад

      You’re welcome! Glad you were able to figure it out!

  • @lvelez1999
    @lvelez1999 Год назад +3

    Sparrows are my favorite birdies

  • @boodling
    @boodling Год назад +2

    Thank you for the pictures of the 15 different sparrows and the distinctive beautiful music they make. I enjoyed them immensely. At least, maybe, 3 or 4 of those sounds can be heard every morning in our backyard. I have one that built a nest under what used to be a healthy, robust, special variety of Begonia with ivies around it. It had hatched its 5 eggs four days ago (8 July 2023); I was hoping I could send you two 30-sec videos and maybe you could help me identify it. Unfortunately, I don’t know how to upload it on this medium. Going back to my Begonia, it is shriveled, thin, and fast drying because I stopped watering and fertilizing it almost a month now… since we noticed 2 birds building a next under it. Again, thank you for educating me, and God bless you abundantly above what you can ask or imagine!

  • @janeenpfeiffer3465
    @janeenpfeiffer3465 Год назад +3

    I think I mostly recognize the tree sparrow. Thanks for this video, it helps!!

  • @halvor5887
    @halvor5887 Год назад

    Thank you for the great video. Extremely informative. I’ve heard many of these calls for decades and this helped me understand the species that makes each vocslization.

  • @timetomakevideos844
    @timetomakevideos844 Год назад +1

    Geard the White Throared Sparrow on the Newfoundland Island so i would whistle back to it and it responded back and forth several times

  • @debcard1136
    @debcard1136 Год назад +1

    Phenomenal. Thank you so much!!

  • @BeastOfTraal
    @BeastOfTraal Год назад +2

    birds tend to studded "drink your tea tea tea tea tea'

  • @gargould7186
    @gargould7186 3 месяца назад +1

    I had a Towhee on my deck last week on the first week of April in Sand Lake, Michigan. Still waiting for my Orioles to show up because they hang around every spring and summer. The Juncos just love peanuts when you break them up into pieces but they will be leaving soon too Canada I suppose

  • @cyborg8623
    @cyborg8623 Год назад +2

    Towhee REET! calls are also very distinctive

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Год назад +1

    I've heard the Towhee! Still not sure if I've seen him though.
    It makes me smile and then kind of wonder "why" - so many creatures in marshy areas seem to sound kind of alike... Both the Swamp Sparrow and the Clay Colored Sparrow honestly sound almost like crickets or frogs (the smaller frogs that're common in my area, anyway). This is really helpful!

  • @thetraveler2561
    @thetraveler2561 Год назад +1

    Many sparrows here in Illinois and in our backyard....they are little eaters...I tell you...seen a Junco the other day!

  • @loveit7484
    @loveit7484 Год назад +1

    Great Video. Heard this was northern birfs. Was so surprised to
    I D the sound of the Harrison Sparrow here in SW.

  • @Zamarae
    @Zamarae 2 месяца назад

    1:43 Yes! I’ve heard sparrows very similar to: White-Throated Sparrow “Oh Sweet, Canada, Canada” but in California--and shorter “Oh sweet, Caaan”
    I live in Texas now and realized I hadn’t heard this and came looking for answers and got them

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  2 месяца назад

      You may have actually been hearing Golden-crowned Sparrows in California! They’re more like “I’m sooo tired”. That could be the abbreviated song you heard

  • @lindap9079
    @lindap9079 Год назад +1

    I live in the PNW so most of these sparrows are not commonly seen, but I'm going to use this video to help on my next visit to the east. Thank you.

    • @juanitakelly3082
      @juanitakelly3082 Год назад +2

      I've actually seen quite a number of these in the PNW. I'm in the Olympia, WA area.

    • @llchristison
      @llchristison Год назад

      Me too and I’m a Western Washington native

  • @lvelez1999
    @lvelez1999 Год назад +3

    Praise God \○/ Gorgeous

  • @Ovenbirder
    @Ovenbirder Год назад +3

    House Sparrows are actually members of the old world family of “true” sparrows, Passeridae (not weaver finches). Our “new world” sparrows belong to family Passerellidae and are “technically” not sparrows but are (depending on your perspective) only named as such because of their resemblance to the old world “true” sparrows. Rather, they are more closely related to old world buntings.

  • @SuperMarlene333
    @SuperMarlene333 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank you so much. I look at them as invasive species and they finish and prevent other birds from getting food because they are too many. However ,my friend told me to watch on RUclips what happened after China killed all their sparrows . Now , watching these videos made me appreciate them more with their songs.

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  3 месяца назад +1

      In the United States the only invasive Sparrow in this video is the House Sparrow

  • @lvelez1999
    @lvelez1999 Год назад +1

    God bless

  • @NortheastTubas-zg1ot
    @NortheastTubas-zg1ot 4 месяца назад +1

    I often get the songs of Chipping Sparrows, Pine Warblers, and Dark-Eyed Juncos mixed up

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  4 месяца назад

      Those are all tricky ones! I think of the junco as more “fluttery”, and the Chipping Sparrow more “mechanical” than the Pine Warbler which is more “insect-like”

  • @fishnsyd
    @fishnsyd Год назад

    Just saw my first chipping sparrow yesterday!

  • @oli_vvk1453
    @oli_vvk1453 2 месяца назад +1

    The white crowned sparrow sounds very different on the west coast. The first note is about the same but the rest is much simpler than the eastern one

  • @shaungoldneru3276
    @shaungoldneru3276 10 месяцев назад

    Cet oiseaux je crois de la famille d'ortolan aussi il s'appelle '' ortolan musicien ou chanteur'' il a un très bon chant. Merci Ben de votre exposé et explications.

  • @thisisme4829
    @thisisme4829 Год назад

    I've been watching your videos trying to find a bird with a call I hear all the time near my house. I can't seem to find it. It starts with a low note goes high then ends low our mid and sounds like a whistle. It's only three notes. I thought it might be a sparrow, but none of them quite match.

  • @karenfoley6455
    @karenfoley6455 Год назад +1

    Have a bird song I can't identify for about 3 years.how do I send my recorded video to you🦋

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад

      You can email us at Badgerlandbirding@gmail.com and we’ll do our best

  • @nourahbinshember2147
    @nourahbinshember2147 2 месяца назад

    😍😍😍😍😍♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️

  • @Tigerpuffer
    @Tigerpuffer 9 месяцев назад

    I wont hold it against y'all that you left out the best of them all - the lark sparrow!

  • @MsDee_777
    @MsDee_777 Год назад

    We only get House Sparrows & White Crown Sparrows.

  • @Grace-pp3dw
    @Grace-pp3dw 11 месяцев назад

    26 The Praise the Lord 86 John 3:16

  • @Grace-pp3dw
    @Grace-pp3dw 11 месяцев назад

    26 the praise the Lord 86 John 3:16

  • @danfridenstine5751
    @danfridenstine5751 2 месяца назад

    Why is the narrator's voice loud yet the bird voices are inaudible?

  • @deborahkogan8742
    @deborahkogan8742 Год назад

    House Sparrows aren't weaverbirds any more. They are in Passeridae.

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +1

      That’s true. They used to be but it’s been changed

  • @snowyowl5556
    @snowyowl5556 Год назад +5

    "House sparrows aren't true sparrows" yes, they're trash birds 😈

    • @MsDee_777
      @MsDee_777 Год назад

      😂😮😂😮😂😮