The icy zeeer of Redwing Turdus iliacus is among the commonest nocturnal flight calls that almost every avid European birdwatcher may have noticed at night. Together with calls of Song Thrush T philomelos and other thrushes it can dominate the auditory soundscape, especially on October ‘thrush nights.’ The first thrushes appearing on September nights often herald a change of migration gear, from engaging to spectacular.
Redwing’s nocturnal flight call, here rendered zeeer, is virtually the same one they use in daytime flight (Bulyuk et al 2017). The rapidly modulated nature of this call highlights a limitation of sonagrams: depending on the ‘window size’ setting it will appear either as fine vertical zigzag lines or as several long horizontal lines sandwiched above each other. The former emphasizes visually the duration and modulation of the call, the latter chiefly the frequencies involved. We need to take this into account when measuring calls (see also Introduction). The sonagrams for this page have been made with a window size of 270.
There is a phenomenon in zeeer calls whereby every so often a secondary modulation is superimposed on the already finely modulated call, making the call appear strongly rippled and giving a more ringing timbre. Some variants may in fact partially lack typical fine modulations (eg, p). As such, they can sound similar to the srrri NFC of Common Blackbird T merula or the flight calls of Bohemian Waxwing Bombycilla garrulus.
Other more rarely heard calls at night include a thrush-typical gak, which can be combined into a gak-zeeer. This is arguably a call with a social function as it is common when several Redwings can be heard flying together. You may also hear rattling alarm calls, especially in nights with strong Redwing migration, and probably as a reaction to the presence of many congeners or a predator.
main features
secondary modulation
Effects of recording quality
Effects of recording quality
zeeer calls
gak calls
Although the ‘normal’ NFC of Redwing is fairly distinct among European thrushes and rarely gives reason for confusion there are thrush species in the Eastern Palaearctic that share highly similar NFCs. However, we consider an aberrant Redwing NFC among hundreds of calls far more likely than a Siberian vagrant, and special care should be taken if a vagrant is suspected. Among the eastern thrushes Eyebrowed Thrush T obscurus, Grey-backed Thrush T hortulorum and Japanese Thrush T cardis share similarly high-pitched and buzzing NFCs. They all differ slightly in the inflection of the call being rather straight or, in the case of Eyebrowed Thrush, slightly ascending.
Bulyuk, V N, Bolshakov, C V & Evstigneeva, M 2017. Do flight-calls of Redwings differ during nocturnal and diurnal migration and daytime stopovers? Ornis Fennica 94: 172-179.