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  • The Northern Cardinal for many of us is that first blaze of color after a long winter.

  • They begin to sing in the late winter, early spring

  • and you see that male cardinal dashing across your yard

  • to take up a post to sing it's brilliant whistled song.

  • The song of the cardinal is actually fairly simple.

  • It's a series of whistled syllables,

  • usually each song is comprised of one to two, sometimes three syllables types.

  • One component of a cardinal's song that often goes overlooked, but if you listen

  • carefully you can actually hear,

  • is a churr or purring that occurs at the end of the song.

  • And it's much softer than the actual whistled notes and they don't always give it.

  • A female Northern Cardinal

  • is as adept as a male at singing.

  • Often this goes overlooked because we assume it's only the males that sing. But

  • if you listen carefully, if you watch you may actually see and hear a female singing.

  • Humans use their voice box to produce sound.

  • We're only able to produce one sound at a time. Birds use another type of organ called the syrinx,

  • and it's located right where the two bronchial tubes come up from each lung.

  • It's a paired structure, it has two sides to it that are equivalent in their

  • ability to generate sound, and a bird

  • actually can produce one sound on the left side and another independent sound on the right side.

  • When a cardinal sings a beautiful upwards sweep whistle

  • it's actually using the left side to produce the lower portion of that whistle.

  • And without any obvious break to us as human beings

  • it produces the higher pitched portion of that whistle with the right side.

  • Just amazing physiology involved in sound production.

  • To see a flash of red and then these fantastic bursts of clear whistled song

  • it's one of those invigorating things that signals the transition from late

  • winter into early spring.

The Northern Cardinal for many of us is that first blaze of color after a long winter.

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