Birds & Birding

One of the most satisfying aspects of birding can be learning to identify the songs and calls of different bird species. Beyond identifying bird species by song, there is a deeper level of understanding that you can achieve. This is to actually understand what the birds are saying.

I had a fleeting moment of bird language comprehension during a research project on willets. I spent many hours over the course of a nesting season immersed in salt marsh sounds, eavesdropping on the daily discourse of willets and other birds using the study site.

One day I was making my rounds and heard a willet cry out. Typically a call of this sort sounded to me like some version of “MEEP!”

But on this occasion, my subconscious mind translated it to… “EAGLE!”

I looked up and there it was, a bald eagle. In an instant the bird life of the marsh erupted into the sky. Somehow it sunk in. The willet word for eagle had worked its way into my subconscious mind.

It stands to reason that if I could comprehend the call of a willet, all the other birds on the marsh could understand it as well.

Especially because their lives may depend on both understanding the alarm and reacting quickly to get out of harm’s way.

For each potential predator, birds must make a specific evasive response. When threatened by an eagle, the safest place to be is in the air.

I suspect that the willets have a word for peregrine falcon as well (a “high pitched jittery squeal” according one author), because the evasion strategy they must instantly implement to save themselves from a peregrine is different from their eagle response.

(To evade peregrines, the move is stay down and get low. Taking to the air is the worst place to be when these aerial hunters are on the scene.)

1 of 5 A bird horror story; a willet evading a peregrine. This particular willet survived its brush with death. Photo © Sam Beebe/Flickr through a Creative Commons license 2 of 5 The peregrine continues to attack and the willet evades by diving. Photo © Sam Beebe/Flickr through a Creative Commons license 3 of 5 The peregrine continues to attack and the willet evades by diving. Photo © Sam Beebe/Flickr through a Creative Commons license 4 of 5 The peregrine continues to attack and the willet evades by diving. Photo © Sam Beebe/Flickr through a Creative Commons license 5 of 5 By continuing this strategy, the willet eventually made it to the safety of the shore. Photo © Sam Beebe/Flickr through a Creative Commons license Click to enlarge | 1 of 5 X

Why Birds Get to the Point

While birds may not have a huge vocabulary, they can (and must) quickly communicate information to each other. The best-known examples of birds and other animals’ ability to communicate the presence of predators.

A rich body of research has revealed that birds can communicate the presence, type and threat level of predators to each other.

Related studies have even shown that different species mutually understand the meaning of each other’s calls.

Experiments where chickadees and titmice are shown stuffed hawks and owls demonstrated that the birds tailor their alarm calls to the predator species and the threat it poses to them.

They save their fiercest invective (i.e. longer periods of calling with more protracted call sequences) for the smaller bird-hunting raptors like screech owls and sharp-shinned hawks. They are less concerned with big, less maneuverable raptors such as red-tailed hawks.

Whether its chickadees or titmice, each species is fluent in the other’s alarm calls, as further experiments have demonstrated. Red-breasted nuthatches, which often are part of mixed-species flocks with chickadees, also understand and react appropriately to the alarm calls given by chickadees.

Becoming Fluent in Bird Alarm Calls

Throughout the world, species living together have learned each other’s predator alarm language.

Chameleons in Madagascar scuttle for cover when a paradise flycatcher yells “hawk!”

In Kenya, dik diks (small antelopes) scram when a go-away bird gives warning.

Also in Kenya, vervet monkeys have their own calls for “leopard” and “hawk” but respond with evasive action to similar warnings made by superb starlings.

Woodchucks in Maine come to alert when they hear either chipmunk or crow alarm calls.

Red squirrels in Germany take flight when they hear the alarm calls of Eurasian jays.

…and the examples go on. The research so far makes it clear that verbal communication among animals about predation threat is very common.

Learning the fundamentals of these calls can enrich our own awareness of the natural world. If we can be tuned to these alarm calls we can allow the birds around us to point out creatures we might not otherwise notice.

The first step on the journey to understanding is to listen for mobbing calls. Often when a predator is identified by birds, they make a commotion. Soon other nearby birds join in and chorus of alarm calls is directed at the threatening entity. It is believed that mobbing functions to harass the potential predator in order to reduce its element of surprise and to drive it from the area.

In my own backyard I’ve witnessed these mobbing responses to predators. Once I saw my backyard chickadees accompanied by flock of five species of warblers bouncing around a snake coiled in a bush.

On another occasion the urgent alarm calls of robins eventually revealing the presence of cat in some undergrowth not far from their nest.

These sightings were made while I was in the middle of something else, but hearing alarm calls attracted my attention. It often takes awhile to discover exactly what the birds are responding to, but patient observation will usually reveal the interloper.

The best place to start learning about bird language is the book What the Robin Knows. The author, Jon Young, has spent a lifetime tuning into the subtleties of bird language gaining insights that may in some cases, put him a step ahead of scientists.

Young emphasizes the importance of spending a lot of time in one place, a “sit spot” listening to the rhythm of bird sounds. He recommends a daily practice and a level of deep concentration almost akin to meditation.

At a certain point in this practice the observer can detect and decode the various deviations of bird calls and behavior from baseline levels.

Although dedication to Jon Young’s methods can yield the almost magical power of divining the presence of other animals by listening to birds, anyone can quickly learn to notice the alarm calls of their backyard bird species.

These audio recordings at Young’s website are a great place to start learning alarm calls – adding a new dimension to your birding and backyard nature adventures.