I was wondering if anyone else would like to see frog calls added to xeno-canto.It seems like the hard parts of the work are already done and it would just take adding a separate anuran taxonomy list.

I'd love to see a place to share other animal sounds (anurans would be great, but there's no reason to stop there - why not insects, mammals, etc?). I don't have a strong opinion on whether they belong on Xeno-canto or in their own database elsewhere, but it would be nice to have a place for them somewhere.


Frog Sounds Free Download


Download Zip 🔥 https://urllio.com/2yGaG6 🔥



The logistics would be a nightmare to have all those lists of world species to add to. Just putting a species up wouldn't be any good unless you can search for it, but general animal noise sharing is a cool idea.

I love the idea and as with so many other animals, sometimes they can sound like birds and vice versa, so there is some merit, plus many sound quite cool. Not sure about the smell thing though, the stench from 3000 Lesser Flamingos around Lake Baringo was quite powerful, or the bat cave in Borneo for the swiftlets, don't want to repeat that thank you.

Chris: we have been toying with that idea of course. Listening to some of the choruses one feels that just focussing on the birds in there is a bit arbitrary. I do no think that when we started there were digital world lists of frogs, or insects (even the bird lists were difficult to come by) but things have changed. We will be meeting some insect people from the museum here shortly. That will be a good occasion to think through all the consequences. There are usually a few more than one thinks at the outset.

Meanwhile there is the possibility to share your recordings of any animal group on Observado. Some XC-contributors already do. See e.g. =&File size is restricted to 1 mb.Mine are on Waarneming.nl, the Dutch branch of Observado.

I could see a sister site on bioacoustics being useful. As for this site one place to start would be a category like 'Common Other-than-bird Sounds'. In Indonesia for example it would be useful to be familiar with sounds made by geckos and macaques. But on the other hand, if one didn't figure out what made a particular sound, putting it on Mysteries would vet it out pretty quickly. Maybe you could start with 'mysterious sounds that proved to be non-avian'.You have to put a limit at some point. Else you'll end up with stuff like the Sonoran Chupacabra that better belongs on a cryptozoology site.

Great Chris, can't wait to listen to them! In the meantime I have nothing but regrets about all those times I was enjoying frog choruses but did not think to make sound recordings of them ... if any of you visit Intervales (SE Brazil) or Wakkerstroom (South Africa) anytime soon you may wanna record some of their incredible choruses!

-content/uploads/2016/04/pseudacris_crucifer.mp3The advertisement is a nearly pure-tone whistle or peep that rises slightly in pitch from beginning to end. It is a loud and piercing call, given about once per second or faster. Distant choruses sound like the jingling of sleigh bells. The aggressive call is a stuttering trill, reminiscent of the calls of chorus frogs: purrrreeeek, usually rising in pitch at the end. Squeaky peeps (rain calls) are given periodically by individuals from shrubs and trees in late summer and autumn.

-content/uploads/2016/04/pseudacris_trisereata.mp3The advertisement call, which lasts a little over a second, is a rapid series of metallic clicks that rise in pitch: crrreeeeek! Calls are typically repeated one after the other, with two or three seconds of silence in between.

-content/uploads/2016/04/rana_pipiens.mp3The advertisement call is a drawn-out rattling snore lasting three seconds or longer, usually followed by various soft grunts or chuckled notes. Snores start soft and grow louder before trailing off at the end.

-content/uploads/2016/04/rana_palustris.mp3The advertisement call is a soft grating snore lasting about two seconds (the snore of the Northern Leopard Frog lasts much longer and is followed by soft grunts). Garbled, throaty notes are occasionally given, along with a staccato guck! that sounds much like the call of the Green Frog.

-content/uploads/2016/04/bufo_americanus.mp3The advertisement call is a long musical trill lasting from five to thirty seconds. Each male in a chorus calls at a slightly different pitch, and individuals often alternate and overlap calls in a pleasing manner. When mounted, males and unreceptive females give release chirps accompanied by abdominal vibrations.

-content/uploads/2016/04/rana_clamitans.mp3The advertisement (and territorial) call is an explosive, throaty gunk! that resembles the sound made by plucking a loose banjo string. Calls are usually delivered in a short series, dropping slightly in pitch and volume from beginning to end: GUNK!-Gunk!-gunk! During an encounter, a male may give a stuttering series of guttural notes that have a Bullfrog-like quality, followed by a sharp staccato note. An abrupt iCUP! may also be given, and frightened individuals often squeak or chirp when leaping into water.

-content/uploads/2016/04/rana_septentrionalis.mp3The advertisement call is a series of about four sharp woody raps, cut-cut-cut-cut. Aroused individuals produce rolling, stuttered series of calls: grrruut-grrruut-grrruut-grrruut.

-content/uploads/2016/04/scaphiophus_holbrookii.mp3The advertisement call is an explosive, nasal utterance, usually down-slurred and sounding like a person gagging: errrrrrrah! Calls are repeated every five to ten seconds. The male has a large vocal pouch. When calling, he throws his head upward and backward out of the water, and the nictitating membranes (inner eyelids) cover his half-closed eyes.

Because a frog chorus is often several species singing together, and the variety changes with the season, here are a few choruses to enjoy. See if you can identify the individual species in each season!

I recently bought a 40 m transceiver on ebay. Its the one called frog sounds. The receive is very weak and I checked voltages on the NE602 and they appear normal. The receiver is only running about a -80 dbm sensitivity and it should be a lot better. I also have a rockmite transceiver and it runs a lot hotter receive. Everything appears ok after the build but I am just not happy with the receive its pretty useless at this point. I probably should have stayed with rockmites but I wanted to try this one out too. Anyone have an idea what could be going on with this radio? Thanks in advance.

The amphibian song revival begins here! This classic of both biological fieldwork and natural sound recordings, compiled and narrated by renowned herpetologist Charles M. Bogert, was originally released by Folkways in 1958, and presents sounds of 57 species of frogs and toads (remastered from the original tapes) that were recorded in swamps, lakes, woods, creeks, and roadside ditches all over North America. Listen to the bewitching tones of the Pig Frog, Dwarf Mexican Treefrog, Little Green Toad, Southwestern Woodhouse's Toad, Great Basin Spadefoot, and other unsung heroes of the bog creek. In a time when frog and toad populations are in rapid decline, this recording reminds us of the remarkable diversity and beautiful sounds we are in danger of losing.

The following audio presentation provides an overview of the frogs and toads found in the Hillsborough River watershed. The presentation is useful in the identification of the frogs and toads in your watershed, neighborhood, and backyard. You will hear a description of each amphibian and the sounds they make. This audio program can be downloaded to your MP3 player for use in the field. You will also find separate audio sounds of each frog and toad that can be individually downloaded to you MP3 player. The presentation is courtesy of the Hillsborough River Watershed Alliance and the Lowry Park Zoo. The audio presentation was produced through a grant from CF Industries. For more information about frogs and toads and the Frog Listening Network, please contact the Lowry Park Zoo at 813-935-8552, extension 258.

If you keep a field journal for your wetland, be sure to note any frog or toad that you see or hear (including the date(s) when you saw/heard them, and where). You can compare these dates from year to year to see how things change from year to year, depending on the weather and other variables.

I've heard a lot about depressing the larynx with the tongue and how one tells that they're doing this by the fact that they sound like Kermit the Frog but are there any examples out there people doing this or are there even any examples of singers who sing that way ? I may have that problem myself, i've been to a quite a few different coaches and the one I have at the moment has had me vocalizing with my tongue touching my back teeth as well as with my tongue sticking out but it still sounds muffled or hollow when I sing a scale or just anything in that general part of my voice. Also just in case anyone was wondering i'm as bass as far I know....the voice type not the fish...

Check the southern Rock band "Blackfoot" . Kermit the Frog to me is more of a swallowing(high larynx closed back of throat) sound not depressed larynx. Depressed or low larynx would be more of a Yogi Bear (low larynx, open back of throat) sound. 152ee80cbc

can u download whatsapp on ipad

download mafia song mp3

visit to the bank to open an account project pdf download