SeEtta, the dickcissel that has been coming to my back yard (Centennial,
Arapahoe County) sounds close to the call you recorded.
Karl Stecher
Centennial
SeEtta Moss writes:
> <<Chuck said: "An interesting difference between the two recordings. The
> Dickcissels I heard last month in Morgan, Washington, and Yuma Counties
> while doing BBS routes were all similar to SeEtta's Canon City area
> recording. In those counties, I haven't heard birds singing the song type
> recorded by Nathan Pieplow in Prowers County. Birds of North America Online
> reports there is individual variation in song within populations of
> Dickcissels, but no differences between populations. The BNA account also
> notes that Dickcissel vocalizations have not been well studied." >>
>
> Chuck's identification of the same song by the northeast Colorado
> Dickcissels as the one I recorded in Canon City is interesting especially
> in light of the following info from an abstract, "GEOGRAPHIC PATTERNS OF
> SONG SIMILARITY IN THE DICKCISSEL" published in AUK in 2008.
>
> - "Abstract.—Song sharing among neighboring males is a well-known,
> frequent outcome of song learning in oscine passerines
> and some other groups, but only limited investigations of the spatial
> scale of this phenomenon have been pursued. On the basis of recordings of
> 1,043 individuals, we investigated song sharing in Dickcissels (Spiza
> americana) at local and regional scales at sites from northern Kansas to
> northern Oklahoma. Classification of song elements revealed decreasing song
> similarity with increasing distances between individual birds at small to
> intermediate scales, to ~10 km. At the largest spatial scales (10-300 km
> between sites), there was very little similarity among sites and no obvious
> tendency for a decrease in similarity with increasing distances among our
> 30
> sites. At our intensively sampled site, analyses of quantitative
> measurements showed that, at least for our most widely shared song
> element,frequency and duration were more similar in closer birds. Thus,
> distance between birds influences both quantitative and qualitativesong
> similarity in Dickcissels. Variability existed among sites in the shape of
> the song-sharing decay curve, which indicates that other factors besides
> distance also govern song-sharing patterns..."
>
> Given that study it would seem more likely that Nathan Pieplows Dickcissel
> from Prowers County would be more similar to the Canon City Dickcissel
> since it is located much closer than Chuck's Dickcissels in northeast
> Colorado. It would be interesting to know if the Dickcissels being
> reported near Boulder and Longmont sing songs similar to either in my
> recording or Nathan's <http://birdsandnature.blogspot.com/>.
>
> BTW, I should have noted that the song I recorded from the Dickcissel in
> Canon City this year is the same song (with minor variations I hear not
> only between birds but between songs by one bird such as an extra 'ciss,
> ciss') I have heard from Dickcissels that I have followed in the Canon City
> area since the first Dickcissel was found (I was present but not the
> identifier).
>
> SeEtta Moss
> Canon City
> Personal blog @ http://BirdsAndNature.blogspot.com
> Blogging for Birds an Blooms Magazine @ http://BirdsAndBloomsBlog.com
>
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