
Hasan
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Posts posted by Hasan
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Long-billed Dowitchers and a Yellowlegs
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4
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1 hour ago, Birds are cool said:
I see what you mean. SO safe to call a Willow?
I mean depends on your definition of 'safe'. Very likely yes, but the photos just really leave a lot to desire
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4
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10 hours ago, Tim Emmerzaal said:
No I am not; the pictures are taken at approximately the same location but at different time points (beginning and end of the walk). I assumed it was the same bird since I did not expect to see a flycatcher this late in the year. You think they are 2 different birds? (I also see now the order of the pictures is wrong; image 1 and 4 are the same)
Eh. Some of the photos just look a little empid-y but it's probably just the angle/light. The bird in the 3rd photo is definitely a Phoebe though
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2 hours ago, Birds are cool said:
https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/359383681
https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/104816021
In my opinion, this sounds exactly like the bird in the original post.
No, that's a 'pip' call, not 'whit'. Compare (especially the spectrogram) to this: https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/354552141
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39 minutes ago, Bird-Boys said:
Why?
Buffy tones with flat back and scaly appearance. No pale base to bill. Why exactly is this a White-rump?
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5
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Alder does not make whit calls. I believe the only eastern empids that make whit sounds are Least and Willow.
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Are you sure all the photos are of the same bird?
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Both are Baird's
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Hard to say. A conservative count would be at least 12 or so.
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It's a Dunlin. Curlew Sand is ruled out by the lack of a primary projection beyond the tail, which would lead to a more 'white-rumped' elongated look
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Hi all,
It's been quite a while since I've given an update on this project, and I'm happy to say that I've just released a version of the app that includes the ENTIRE eBird taxonomy (at least, all species with audio recordings).
This is a monumental upgrade for this application, and now you're able to fully customize and build your own quizzes, rather than having to rely on prebuilt ones. There are also now two modes, one for learning, in which you're able to see the name of the species and listen along, and the classic quiz mode, where you can test your abilities.
In addition, I've totally reskinned the entire application, and you are now able to optionally show or hide the spectrogram. I've also added the feature to save your custom quizzes, and suggest them for review to be added under the 'curated' section. Finally, I've removed the leaderboard, as I don't believe that it is in line with my vision for the app as a learning tool, not competitive one.
Here's the link: http://earbirder.com/
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That's definitely not a Dickcissel, and I honestly don't think it's a bird
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Herring Gull
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Honestly it looks a little stocky but not gonna be able to get an ID off this one
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Oh yeah, that's the real deal. A Midwestern specialty.
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The plumage looks too uniformly dirty yellow for COYE, the bill is small and sharp, and the legs look thin, not thick and bright pink as COYE
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Yeah it's definitely unidentifiable from this photo. Maybe if the photo didn't have artifacts or there were others from different perspectives.
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Why not Orange-crowned Warbler? Looks much better for that species to me
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Lesser for me. I don't know which species is more expected but I would probably leave it at Lesser or a slash.
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Pink-footed Shearwater is very rare off Hawaii, and would have a pink bill. This is definitely Wedge-tailed. Look how long that tail is
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Could you please be more specific with location? What state?
Either way, this appears to be an Acadian Flycatcher based on the large bill, yellow-green coloration, and very long primaries.
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Might be too Blurry
in Help Me Identify a North American Bird
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2 Leasts and 1 Semipalm, it appears. Definitely no Dunlin