A warm evening in late May on a former military training ground. The sun goes down and bird song activity is high. Wood Larks are abundant and their song can be heard continuously. Willow Warbler, Tree Pipit, Yellowhammer and Common Blackbird are regular singers as well. At night the song of several European Nightjars can be heard. The songs of Field Crickets is a continuous background sound of this place.
The sounds of birds, mammals, amphibians, insects or anything that is human-related are annotated in the spectrogram below and include:
Wood Lark – Heidelerche – Lullula arborea
Willow Warbler – Fitis – Phylloscopus trochilus
Green Woodpecker – Grünspecht – Picus viridis
Great Spotted Woodpecker – Buntspecht – Dendrocopos major
Tree Pipit – Baumpieper – Anthus trivialis
Common Chaffinch – Buchfink – Fringilla coelebs
Common Cuckoo – Kuckuck – Cuculus canorus
Grey Heron – Graureiher – Ardea cinerea
Common Blackbird – Amsel – Turdus merula
Hooded Crow – Nebelkrähe – Corvus cornix
Yellowhammer – Goldammer – Emberiza citrinella
European Nightjar – Ziegenmelker – Caprimulgus europaeus
Song Thrush – Singdrossel – Turdus philomelos
Eurasian Woodcock- Waldschnepfe – Scolopax rusticola
Eurasian Skylark – Feldlerche – Alauda arvensis
European Robin – Rotkehlchen – Erithacus rubecula