A bird and a puzzling sound lead to discovery

A Wilson鈥檚 snipe
Photo by Seth Beaudreault
A Wilson鈥檚 snipe near Toolik Field Station in northern Alaska.

I walked around outside our Two Rivers home early one morning, as I sometimes do. It was mid-May and we 鈥 that鈥檚 my wife, Julie, and me 鈥 were about ready to head to work.

The birds had recently returned. While waiting to get in the car, I heard American robins, black-capped chickadees, a ruby-crowned kinglet and a Swainson鈥檚 thrush in our woods above Potlatch Creek. A raven flew over our sled dogs.

I know most of those bird songs, but I reached for my phone and its nifty bird-identification app anyway because it鈥檚 fun.

Then came a song that surely was from a boreal owl. 

Julie and I have heard it for several years. Everyone knows an owl sound. This one clearly qualified as hoot-ish.

The Cornell Lab鈥檚 Merlin bird app disagreed with me that morning. It identified the sound as that of a Wilson鈥檚 snipe, or Gallinago delicata by its scientific name. I tried the app again. Same result: a Wilson鈥檚 snipe.

I ran to the house. 鈥淗ey, we have a new bird! Remember that sound we鈥檝e long thought was a boreal owl? It isn鈥檛.鈥

There was a bit of excitement.

Snipe in flight against a clear blue sky.
Photo by Seth Beaudreault
A Wilson鈥檚 snipe in flight in the area of Toolik Field Station in northern Alaska.

Wilson鈥檚 snipe are shorebirds. Ours must be enjoying the marshes of Potlatch Creek below us in a super shallow valley.

A little bit of research quickly informed us that the sound isn鈥檛 a birdsong at all. It鈥檚 the sound of some serious tailfeather action known as winnowing. It occurs in flight during high-speed courting or territorial displays and is mostly a feature of snipe.

鈥淭he Wilson snipe鈥檚 outer tail feathers are the part that makes the winnowing sound as it vibrates,鈥 said Jack Withrow, bird collections manager at the University of Alaska Museum of the North. He鈥檚 been the manager for about 20 years.

I had turned to Jack for some answers.

A man stands in front of an open museum cabinet holding two small bird specimens.
Photo by Rod Boyce
Bird collections manager Jack Withrow holds two species of snipe from the University of Alaska Museum of the North collection. He holds a Wilson鈥檚 snipe in his left hand and a common snipe in his right hand.

Jack took me down to 鈥淭he Range,鈥 the museum鈥檚 collections area housing banks of tall, wheeled cabinets, each holding numerous specimen trays. We stood in front of a cabinet he had just opened in one rolling wall. It included several meticulously placed and labeled birds of the genus Gallinago, which consists of .

Jack carefully brought out and held two bird specimens, a and a , to show the stiff and sturdy outer tail feathers. Both species make the winnowing sound, but the Wilson鈥檚 pitch is higher due to the feathers鈥 narrower width.

Wilson鈥檚 snipe breed across all of Alaska and nearly all of Canada. Common snipe only breed in some western regions of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. The two were considered the same species until 2003.

鈥淚t鈥檚 narrower on this bird,鈥 Jack said of the Wilson鈥檚 outer tail feathers. 鈥淚t's subtle, but you can see the common snipe as opposed to the Wilson鈥檚 snipe has a broader outer tail feather.鈥

It鈥檚 so subtle that you鈥檇 need some calipers to discern the difference. 

But what actually happens to make the winnowing sound?

A close shot of two hands holding a tagged bird specimen, drawing attention to the outer tail feather.
Photo by Rod Boyce
Bird collections manager Jack Withrow, of the University of Alaska Museum of the North, shows the outer tail feather of a snipe.

Wind rushes over a diving snipe鈥檚 outer tail feathers, vibrating them rapidly like the reed of a musical instrument. Those vibrations push and pull the surrounding air, creating pressure waves that we interpret as sound 鈥 the haunting winnowing.

Adam van Casteren of the University of Manchester detailed the aerodynamics of the common snipe鈥檚 outer tail feathers in a in the Journal of Experimental Biology. He wrote that the outer feathers can withstand great wind speeds.

George Sutton, a leading ornithologist of the early to late 20th century, described hearing the sound while in a boggy Pennsylvania woodland in April 1922.

鈥淭he hooting sounded like the rapid beating of wings,鈥 he wrote in a in The Wilson Bulletin, a quarterly ornithology magazine. 鈥淎t times it was so sudden and loud that it was almost frightening.鈥

鈥淔or years I have pondered this remarkable hooting or bleating, wondering whether it has ever been explained fully and correctly,鈥 he wrote.

So Sutton went to work. He reviewed several studies and observations from the mid- to late 1800s, along with related drawings of snipe behavior and sounds. The earlier research offered ideas.

The tail feathers began to draw interest from those early bird experts. Sutton became convinced.

Specimens of a Wilson's snipe and a common snipe held side by side.
Photo by Rod Boyce
The Wilson's snipe (top) and common snipe (bottom) are similar in appearance but distinguishable by subtle differences in plumage patterning.

鈥淒isplay flights are accompanied by hooting, bleating, neighing, or whinnying sounds that are widely believed to be nonvocal and that almost certainly are produced by vibration of some or all of the tail feathers,鈥 Sutton wrote nearly 60 years after his visit to the Pennsylvania marsh.

Let鈥檚 get back to Julie鈥檚 and my house and 鈥渙ur鈥 Wilson鈥檚 snipe.

I saw one zipping around above a snowmelt pond by our driveway recently and first thought it was a swallow. Its wings appeared sharp and angled in its zippy flight, similar to those of a swallow, but then I saw it land by the pond. It waded in a few steps and took some sips through its long, needle-like bill.

That, its coloring and its matchstick legs gave it away.

We learned a lot thanks to this tiny bird鈥檚 owl-like sounds that rose from a nearby creek and traveled through the woods to our ears.

Ain鈥檛 that a hoot?

Since the late 1970s, the 日韩无码' Geophysical Institute has provided the Alaska Science Forum column free in cooperation with the 日韩无码 research community.