Learn 35+ Warblers Songs (Central and Eastern United States)

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • Learn how to identify 37 Warblers by song with tips and mnemonic devices. These are the most common warblers you will encounter in the Central and Eastern United States. Special thanks to everyone who contributed songs or media (listed below).
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    Warbler Calls (Edited)
    Yellow-throated Wabler by Tate Putnam (Used with permission)
    Bay-breasted Warbler by Nolan Meyer (Used with permission)
    Connecticut Warbler by Rob Pendergast (Used with permission)
    Swainson’s Warbler by Derek Sallmann
    Kentucky Warbler by Ryan Sallmann
    Blue-winged Warbler call (Bee-buzz) by Ryan Sallmann
    Palm Warbler by Rob Pendergast (Used with permission)
    Pine Warbler by Ryan Sallmann
    Kirtland’s Warbler by Justin Watts (CC by 3.0)
    Prairie Warbler by Peter Wilton (CC by 3.0)
    Prothonotary Warbler by Tom Austin (CC by 3.0)
    Northern Waterthrush by Peter Wilton (CC by 3.0)
    Wilson’s Warbler by Peter Wilton (CC by 3.0)
    Ovenbird by Jonathon Jongsma (CC by 3.0)
    Worm-eating Warbler by G. McGrane (PD)
    Cerulean Warbler by Taylor Sturm (CC by 4.0)
    Northern Parula by Jonathon Jongsma (CC by 3.0)
    Northern Waterthrush by Peter Wilton (CC by 3.0)
    Prothonotary Warbler by Tom Austin (CC by 3.0)
    Black-throated Blue by Tom Austin (CC by 3.0)
    Louisiana Waterthrush by Philip Vanbergen (CC by 3.0)
    Orange-crowned Warbler by Peter Wilton (CC by 3.0)
    All other Warbler Calls by Jonathon Jongsma (CC by 3.0)
    Videos
    All videos by Derek and Ryan Sallmann
    Photos (Edited)
    Prairie Warbler by Kyle Brooks (PD)
    flic.kr/p/2nGW9aW
    Yellow-throated Warbler by Susan Young (PD)
    flic.kr/p/MyMzoC
    Swainson’s Warbler by Alan Schmierer (PD)
    flic.kr/p/VcbXyL
    Connecticut Warbler by Alan Schmierer (PD)
    flic.kr/p/KRkLpU
    Louisiana Waterthrush by Alan Schmierer (PD)
    flic.kr/p/2dF9KUZ
    Worm-eating Warbler by Susan Young (PD)
    flic.kr/p/ZBbC3S
    Blue-winged Warbler by Kyle Brooks (PD)
    flic.kr/p/2nG8qrR
    Orange-crowned Warbler by Alan Schmierer (PD)
    flic.kr/p/L2jers
    Kentucky Warbler, Cerulean Warbler, and Pine Warbler by Ryan Sallmann
    Tennessee Warbler by Alan Schmierer (PD)
    flic.kr/p/f7CjM8
    All other photos by Lorri Howski (Used with permission)
    Cover image Warblers by Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren (CC by 2.0, edited)
    flic.kr/p/26s7LsX
    flic.kr/p/2jRaCpp
    flic.kr/p/2kZgH4i
    CC by 2.0: creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    CC by 3.0: creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    PD = Public Domain
    #Birding #BirdWatching #BadgerlandBirding
    0:00 Introduction
    0:23 Yellow-rumped Warbler
    0:35 Black-and-white Warbler
    0:49 Tennessee Warbler
    1:05 Orange-crowned Warbler
    1:21 Nashville Warbler
    1:41 Northern Parula
    1:55 Yellow Warbler
    2:04 Magnolia Warbler
    2:16 Cape May Warbler
    2:30 Black-throated Green Warbler
    2:44 Black-throated Blue Warbler
    2:58 Chestnut-sided Warbler
    3:08 Ovenbird
    3:22 Blackburnian Warbler
    3:52 American Redstart
    4:07 Prothonotary Warbler
    4:19 Hooded Warbler
    4:30 Golden-winged Warbler
    4:42 Blue-winged Warbler
    4:54 Pine Warbler
    5:08 Cerulean Warbler
    5:23 Blackpoll Warbler
    5:41 Common Yellowthroat
    5:50 Louisiana Waterthrush
    6:10 Northern Waterthrush
    6:23 Mourning Warbler
    6:35 Wilson's Warbler
    6:47 Worm-eating Warbler
    7:00 Canada Warbler
    7:18 Kirtland's Warbler
    7:28 Swainson's Warbler
    7:44 Kentucky Warbler
    7:58 Prairie Warbler
    8:13 Yellow-throated Warbler
    8:27 Bay-breasted Warbler
    8:41 Connecticut Warbler
    8:50 Palm Warbler

Комментарии • 63

  • @BadgerlandBirding
    @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +3

    Richard pointed out the Blackpoll Warbler audio is the call, here is the song: xeno-canto.org/670583
    0:00 Introduction
    0:23 Yellow-rumped Warbler
    0:35 Black-and-white Warbler
    0:49 Tennessee Warbler
    1:05 Orange-crowned Warbler
    1:21 Nashville Warbler
    1:41 Northern Parula
    1:55 Yellow Warbler
    2:04 Magnolia Warbler
    2:16 Cape May Warbler
    2:30 Black-throated Green Warbler
    2:44 Black-throated Blue Warbler
    2:58 Chestnut-sided Warbler
    3:08 Ovenbird
    3:22 Blackburnian Warbler
    3:52 American Redstart
    4:07 Prothonotary Warbler
    4:19 Hooded Warbler
    4:30 Golden-winged Warbler
    4:42 Blue-winged Warbler
    4:54 Pine Warbler
    5:08 Cerulean Warbler
    5:23 Blackpoll Warbler
    5:41 Common Yellowthroat
    5:50 Louisiana Waterthrush
    6:10 Northern Waterthrush
    6:23 Mourning Warbler
    6:35 Wilson's Warbler
    6:47 Worm-eating Warbler
    7:00 Canada Warbler
    7:18 Kirtland's Warbler
    7:28 Swainson's Warbler
    7:44 Kentucky Warbler
    7:58 Prairie Warbler
    8:13 Yellow-throated Warbler
    8:27 Bay-breasted Warbler
    8:41 Connecticut Warbler
    8:50 Palm Warbler

  • @Shrock568
    @Shrock568 5 месяцев назад +7

    I am in the Missouri young birders club. In May we where doing an event where we would lead kids and their families on bird walks to find warblers. I didn’t know how to identify warblers by sound so I watched this video a lot. During the bird walks I used what I learned from the video to find warblers and I taught the mnemonic devises to the kids. Thank you so much for making this video and your channel!

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  5 месяцев назад +1

      That’s awesome! Happy to hear the video was helpful!

  • @ABirdersParadise
    @ABirdersParadise Год назад +9

    As someone who has tried to record myself saying only 3 different phrases associated with bird songs or calls, I find it amazing that you were able to record that many without us being able to hear laughter in your voice. :D

  • @tracyreaume6451
    @tracyreaume6451 Год назад +3

    Oh so many beautiful warblers!

  • @jennlodi-smith3233
    @jennlodi-smith3233 4 месяца назад +1

    My kiddos came up with the mnemonic "cheese cheese in my knees" for a very gregarious pair of Black-throated Green Warblers at our campsite a few years back and here in Buffalo we love to say that they are singing "Let's go Buffalo!" :)
    Thanks for the video - always helpful for brushing up prior to spring!

  • @doriseckel593
    @doriseckel593 5 месяцев назад +2

    I just love listening to birds and this has made so exited, because we have heard many of the Warblers without knowing what bird was singing, very great help for us , who love birds!

  • @michaelkoutnik4026
    @michaelkoutnik4026 Год назад +5

    This is VERY helpful. It would be even more helpful in memorizing if the name of the bird was continuously displayed until the next bird is shown. ;)

  • @adventureswithgnomie6553
    @adventureswithgnomie6553 5 месяцев назад

    My Mom had a couple Christmas decorations that you plugged in. They played bird calls. One was random blend of bird calls but the other was a blend of different Warblers for a long song. Her Parakeets, Cockatiel and Canary tried to imitate.

  • @GeoNebula
    @GeoNebula Год назад +1

    I remember the year I finally learned some of the warbler songs, spring migration was so exciting on the Gulf coast! Thanks for creating this great resource!

  • @trueaco
    @trueaco Год назад +3

    Outstanding!!!

  • @garymeredith2441
    @garymeredith2441 Год назад +1

    Derek on my Grand Cherokee I have A ten disc C/D player in the back I have 6 CDs of Bird sounds that I listen to while I'm driving this is one the ways I learned bird sounds it is helped tremendously over the years .

    • @OspreyFlyer
      @OspreyFlyer Год назад +2

      I did that in the 90s. It did help a lot.

  • @wisconsinbackyardbirding
    @wisconsinbackyardbirding Год назад +1

    I'm hoping to see some warblers this spring. You guys do a great job on ID sounds.

  • @BK-db3gc
    @BK-db3gc Год назад +2

    Thank you so very much for this! Very helpful!

  • @terrywatts1060
    @terrywatts1060 Год назад

    This is amazing

  • @debmilligan9347
    @debmilligan9347 Год назад

    This was so helpful. Thank you!

  • @nathanwebb4836
    @nathanwebb4836 Год назад +1

    I enjoy hearing the songs of warblers.

  • @boredwarlock5216
    @boredwarlock5216 Год назад +1

    Best video ever!!!

  • @pauraque
    @pauraque Год назад +4

    West coast birders: am I a joke to you?

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +6

      May or may not be working on a western version too 👀

    • @wincoffin7985
      @wincoffin7985 Год назад

      OMG, I had more difficulty splitting hermit from Townsend's songs a couple of years ago... and lots of neck-craning, so I never was certain in many cases. I'm more familiar with our eastern warblers!!

    • @pauraque
      @pauraque Год назад

      ​@@wincoffin7985 Yep, I was born, raised, and I live in California. See TOWA all the time, see HEWA very rarely, BTYW something in between those, but I can never ever separate the songs. I am convinced it is impossible.

  • @peterjohnson617
    @peterjohnson617 4 месяца назад

    Thank you !

  • @headlesspiper936
    @headlesspiper936 Год назад +1

    this is amazing. i like warblers and this is a great video if you want to study warblers

  • @MrTmiket0007
    @MrTmiket0007 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing another wonderful video like always, I am getting ready for the warblers migration in Cape May NJ in April 👍👌

  • @suebaribass
    @suebaribass Год назад

    Thanks for this video! I checked here while trying to ID a neighborhood warbler song, and now my brain is full. 😊

  • @g57462
    @g57462 Год назад

    Enjoyed 😉 thank you

  • @Stan4535814
    @Stan4535814 8 месяцев назад

    I found myself watching & listening to my flock of finches when some strangely-patterned members of the crowd started whistling & singing. My college ornithology class was in 1986, and my notes & bird-call cassette tapes LONG gone. Fortunate then, that this YT channel exists, huh? It's been a great help. But why, exactly, do the juncos accompany these fellas? My Peterson book sheds no light on this phenomenon, can you?

  • @julesa.5887
    @julesa.5887 Год назад +24

    How many times did you burst out laughing while mimicking these songs during the voice-over? 😄

  • @OspreyFlyer
    @OspreyFlyer Год назад +1

    I walk a lot of birding routes. Nowadays, I've learned and remembered bird songs (plus chips, calls, alarms etc.) much faster with Merlin Bird ID app by Cornell Lab. I started in the old days by playing bird song CDs while driving. I also birded alone and with mentors on Audubon field trips. I was determined to become an ear birder as much as possible.

  • @pauraque
    @pauraque Год назад +6

    Parulas and redstarts have pretty different alternate songs that probably should have been mentioned

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +2

      Feel free to add links to them

    • @pauraque
      @pauraque Год назад +3

      @@BadgerlandBirding Not sure I can but in your fashion...
      parula:
      brrrrrrrrrr-tsip!
      whezy whezy whezy zzyzyzyz-tsip!
      Redstart male: (in the video)
      redstart female: pe-peep-pe-pepe-peep

    • @wincoffin7985
      @wincoffin7985 Год назад

      Black-throated green, too. "zee-zee-zoo-zee" (zoo is lower). Also "zoo-zee-zoo-zoo-zee". But both have the same quality. Yellow warbler also has several alternatives, some that sound nothing like the "sweet, sweet, I am so sweet" standard. True for several others too -- but one has to start somewhere! I've heard orange-crowned and pine sound almost exactly like each other, though the typical calls tend to go one way or the other. It's not easy!

  • @dkthebirder09
    @dkthebirder09 Год назад

    I'm going to Tennessee later this year and I am really hoping to see a Swainson's Warbler! Thanks for this video, I now know what to listen for! Thanks, guys!

  • @zfgkjbkj
    @zfgkjbkj Год назад +1

    I like this format, i wish there was more mnemonic devices to remember the calls better

  • @KaylaM-lm1dy
    @KaylaM-lm1dy 3 месяца назад +1

    Hi! Who is the bird singing in the background of the Cerulean Warbler (after the first play)? I grew up hearing that call and it’s so nostalgic!

  • @falcoperegrinus82
    @falcoperegrinus82 Год назад

    Bt Blue gives an alternate song that is very similar to Cerulean. I was definitely thrown last spring by a Bt Blue that was giving that song from high in the canopy. For the Blackpoll example, those were alarm calls, not its song.

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад

      Oh yeah, you’re correct about the Blackpoll. I’ll make a note

  • @vistaprime
    @vistaprime 3 месяца назад +1

    Have you guys on the Badgerland birding team seen the Kirtland's warbler in person?

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  2 месяца назад

      Indeed we have on more than a few occasions!

    • @vistaprime
      @vistaprime 2 месяца назад

      @@BadgerlandBirding I envy you guys. it's my dream to go out birding with you fellows some day.

  • @leedee4968
    @leedee4968 Год назад

    ✅❤️

  • @divyanshdas9014
    @divyanshdas9014 Год назад

    8:04

  • @RaktaTara
    @RaktaTara Год назад

    I’ve been looking around to find a bird that I’ve heard but can’t seem to see. It makes a sort of a “Tweeeeeee, Tweeeeeee, tu,tu,tu,tu,tu”. It’s a little bit like 0:03. Been trying to identify the bird for months. I kinda need help 😅

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад

      Maybe try looking at the different Northern Cardinal songs

    • @RaktaTara
      @RaktaTara Год назад

      @@BadgerlandBirding Woah! I never knew that a bird I’ve been seeing all my life made that sound! Thank you so much kind sir!

  • @wincoffin7985
    @wincoffin7985 Год назад

    You gave some good, well-known mnemonics, but some of your recordings seemed a bit atypical and didn't fulfill the promise. Most obvious was that blackpoll, which really does fade in and out as you described, but the recording didn't illustrate that. I know the songs can be so variable from one individual to the next, and from one region to another... but one has to start somewhere! Anyway, thanks much -- I only recommend to others to listen to other recordings as well, as I'm sure everyone will if you're serious about learning the calls. It's not easy! It's especially challenging as some of the calls and little "chips" come into play, and the flight calls, too. There's really no substitute for years of time in the field, but I am amazed at the availability of good recordings now. When I was growing up, there was only one way: get into the field and track down that unknown song. Lots of good memories! Keep up the good work.

  • @pauraque
    @pauraque Год назад +3

    Difference between townsends, hermit, and black throated gray warbler songs?
    Get a visual

    • @OntarioBirding7538
      @OntarioBirding7538 Год назад

      Those are western warblers so I don’t think he would show them

  • @House.Of.Keeping
    @House.Of.Keeping Год назад

    The black poll seems wrong to me

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +1

      Blackpoll is the call not the song by mistake. Song is linked in the pinned comment

  • @OntarioBirding7538
    @OntarioBirding7538 11 месяцев назад

    I can barely hear the palm warbler and Connecticut

  • @phishfearme2
    @phishfearme2 Год назад

    i think the Cornell Lab's Merlin bird ID app for smart phones is much better than trying to use a nice vid like this to discern warblers based on calls

    • @BadgerlandBirding
      @BadgerlandBirding  Год назад +3

      This video is for you to learn the songs so you know them when you go out, not really to use while you’re in the field.

    • @jacobmeier19
      @jacobmeier19 Год назад +1

      Also Merlin sound ID can be a very useful tool, BUT I would never recommend relying on it. I threw it on last time I went birding and it mistook a Blue Jay for a catbird and a cowbird for an Eastern Wood-Pewee