Hello from Longleaf Elementary. Our class would like to know if you have video or sound clip/link so that we may hear what sounds a Grey Catbird can make? We found the information very interesting. We are also trying to figure out how to see the answer of a picture from the day before. Thanks!
I have not caught their song myself, but you can hear several recordings on Cornell's All About Birds site. The mew song is what gave them the name Catbird.
Maybe the tongue, beak, special voice box, larynx, songbird syrinx, or something in their chest?(my dove coos and doesn't even open his beak, but his chest goes in and out)
Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 02/15/2012 - 13:36.
its type of vocal cords
the vibration of its vocal cords
its type of nostrils
its type of beak
perhaps the control it has over its diaphram
the way it bobs its head back and forth
Song
Hello from Longleaf Elementary. Our class would like to know if you have video or sound clip/link so that we may hear what sounds a Grey Catbird can make? We found the information very interesting. We are also trying to figure out how to see the answer of a picture from the day before. Thanks!
Catbird song
I have not caught their song myself, but you can hear several recordings on Cornell's All About Birds site. The mew song is what gave them the name Catbird.
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/gray_catbird/sounds/ac
I think I know.
He/She Eats honey I think.
Could it be?
Maybe the tongue, beak, special voice box, larynx, songbird syrinx, or something in their chest?(my dove coos and doesn't even open his beak, but his chest goes in and out)
Iacono's Lunch Bunch
its type of vocal cords
the vibration of its vocal cords
its type of nostrils
its type of beak
perhaps the control it has over its diaphram
the way it bobs its head back and forth
special voicebox
special voicebox
sound
maybe singing.
i know
I know that this is a graycatbird. It has a really cool voice because its call almost sounds like a cats mew
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