Crested Cara Cara Photographs and Sound
Recording
Photos by Greg Clark, May 1997 and Earle Robinson, May 1998
During the Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas survey work in
1997 we found this occupied nest. In 1998 we returned to find that the nest was
occupied again. Looking over a huge geographic area in south central
In 1997 the nest site shown
in the photograph was the sole domain of the CC. In 1998 the site became much
busier. Because of the abundant food supply in 1998, the Northern Mockingbirds
were really upset by any intrusion in their territory. The Mockingbirds would
chase, harrass, and constantly scold the CC adults around the nest. The
recording available to download has both the CC and the Mockingbird scold on
the recording. In addition to these birds a Gilded Flicker built a nest in the
same cactus. When you listen to the recording it is possible to hear the baby
Flickers inside the cactus.
Photo By Earle
Robinson, May 1998
These two photographs show the birds perched on the
top of the cactus above the nest (not shown in the photos). In one photo one of
the adults is bringing food to the nest. In the other photo the bird has his
head laid back onto his back. This is done while the bird calls. The bird
starts a call and may finish without laying his head back. However, if he does
lay his head back it changes the frequency and duration of the call. There are
examples of this in the recording.
The
original CC sound recording was produced using a Sennheiser MKH70 shotgun microphone
and the audio was stored on a 48 ksps DAT using a Tascam DA-P1 digital audio
recorder. The recording was down-sampled to 44.1 ksps and converted to MPEG3 to
reduce the file size to 430K bytes. This recording is an example of
"remote micing". The microphone is placed very close to the nest, on
a tripod, and shielded cable is run from the microphone to the tape recorder
about 100 feet away. The idea is to give the birds some room. In this case 100
feet wasn't enough. I had to get 300 feet away before the bird would ignore my
presence. In these cases you just turn on the tape recorder, set one of the
record channels a little lower to be sure you don't saturate the amplifier, and
go off to watch and hope the bird comes back and says something. The microphone
was about 15 feet from the nest.The recording has has some of the Mockingbird
scolds removed to make it shorter for a faster download. Also, blank spots with
no bird sounds have been removed for the same reason.
Calling CC with companion Northern Mockingbird. Photo by Earle Robinson,
May 1998.
download
mpeg3 recording (cc_mb2.mp3)
Copyright Greg Clark, 1999
View CC Babies In
Nest -- Crested Cara Cara baby photographs, nest, and adult with snake and
Mockingbird