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American Bittern Transcript-673
BirdNote®
American Bittern: Master of Camouflage
Written by Bob Sundstrom
This is BirdNote!
[American Bittern’s “oonk-a-loonk” calls, repeated]
One fine spring morning as you walk near a marsh, you are stopped in your tracks by a loud, reverberating call, with a cadence that seems lifted from an old cartoon soundtrack.
[American Bittern’s “oonk-a-loonk” calls, repeated]
You scan the cattails, but it seems this comical sound has an invisible source.
[American Bittern’s “oonk-a-loonk” calls, repeated]
Then, after a long moment, into an opening in the cattails walks what looks like a good-sized heron, but with a mottled brown back and bold brown stripes running the length of its very long neck. You are looking at an American Bittern, a member of the heron tribe that spends much of its time in the dense cover of the reeds. Bitterns are masters of camouflage. Not only does their striped plumage perfectly imitate surrounding vegetation, but for further concealment, they freeze, holding their heads and necks upward at an angle that mimics the reeds.
[American Bittern’s “oonk-a-loonk” calls, repeated]
Have you ever been awestruck by an unusual bird or its surprising behavior? Or experienced a magical moment when something a bird did left you entranced? Let us know at BirdNote, and perhaps some morning, we will recount your story. Visit our web site, BirdNote.org. I’m Frank Corrado.
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Call of the American Bittern provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Recorded by S.R. Pantle
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
© 2006 Seattle Audubon © 2008 Tune In to Nature.org Revised 4/7 for WNPR for 5/08
ID# 042406AMBIKPLU
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