this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2024
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Can confirm
Image description: A screenshot from a birdpi, a device that identifies birds by their song, and catalogues their activity vs the time of day. The image shows a small amount of activity from a Barn Owl at 10pm and 1am. It also shows a very large volume of activity at 7am from crows, and other Australian birds
I really like this. I'm not sure if this is the first I actually got to see how BirdPi maps the data, but that looks very easy to read.
Was going to complain about a noticeable lack of kookaburra, but then I noticed something called a "noisy miner."
I love that yellow at the eye. It gives it such an intense look along with that very pointed face. Made me think of the classic dramatic prairie dog.
For what it's worth, I've got a second birdpi set up at my partners house, and there are kookaburras there! And lots of noisy miners too! Those birds really live up to their name, they are really noisy!
As long as someone is watching out for the kookaburras!
The miners sound like very loud Guinea pigs.
But they move in larger packs, and are more aggressive. No cat is safe from a flock of miners screeching at them!
I did watch another news-type segment where they put up a Bluetooth speaker in a tree and played another bird song and it almost immediately got attached by miners. They said they really stress out a lot of other wildlife.
There was a second part I wasn't closely listening to as I was walking somewhere while listening, but something about them eating some sweet protective coating off a certain tree so now the bugs are able to damage the trees.
At first I thought they sounded kinda cute, but then as I saw the group sizes, I saw how it would quickly get old, especially if they drive off other animals.
does BirdPi work with babies?
Mom asked me today; "what kind of bird's babies make a loud screeching sound? Like really loud. Like we could hear them from [500 yards away]'s yard."
"... all of them?"
I assume so! If a bird expert can identify the bird from a given call, chances are, so can the bird pi (though not quite as accurately)