The House Sparrow "song" is a steady series of call-like notes (male, Mar, PA).
The variety of the notes is quite amazing. The following sonagrams of the first 8 seconds of the song show that almost every note is different. Perhaps the House Sparrow derserves more respect as a songster.
This repeated chlip chlip appeared to be a song by a male (April, PA).
This male was singing from a tree top, and again, this was just one phrase repeated over and over (with Tree Swallows, Apr, PA).
House Sparrows have a wide vocabulary of calls.
The extended chatter is typically given by females (June, PA).
The cheep of a male can also be heard (according to BNA females do not often cheep).
A different, clearer cheep by a male (May, PA).
Another example of "cheep", which can sound similar to the House Finch (Jan, PA)
Another call by a male, "ch-ree" (Apr, PA).
An agitated male near its nest-site, with 3 different calls (May, PA).
chur
chips at 10s, notes similar to the female chatter call on sonagram
shorter churs at 35s
A harder sounding chur, from a bird deep in a bush (Jan, PA).
A descending chip (sex unknown)(June, PA).
Juvenile House Sparrow begging call (Aug, PA).
Glad I found your blog. I have a multitude of birds around our house, but have no idea what they are. Here is the chorus I hear most mornings. http://quiltingreadersgarden.blogspot.com/2011/05/morning-chorus.html
ReplyDeleteCould some of these be sparrows?
from the west coast.