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Arizona Bird Call

Arizona Bird Call
Author: Mike Ameigh
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© 2025 Arizona Bird Call
Description
Information for Arizona birders including summaries of research and analysis related to bird conservation and protection. Introductions to common Arizona birds, Arizona birding hotspots, governmental and non-profit agencies charged with bird conservation.
Podcast host Mike Ameigh is a retired professor/academic administrator with the the State University of New York. He holds a PhD in Public Communication from the Newhouse School of Public Communication at Syracuse University.
209 Episodes
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A report on how birds and other wildlife keep cool during the heat of the Arizona summer. Bird of the episode: Crested Caracara. Birding Hotspot: Big Horn Mountains Wilderness. Friend of wildlife: Arizona Ecological Services Field Office. Calendar of bird-friendly events coming up in Arizona.
Arizona Game and Fish Department statement encouraging the public to not feed wildlife. Doing so has the potential to spread diseases and encourage dangerous encounters with humans. Birdability update on innovative technologies designed to give disabled birders and other outdoor enthusiasts access to nature trails and other wildlife viewing opportunities. A report on the elusive Five-striped Sparrow in Southeastern Arizona. Bird of the episode: American Redstart. Birding hotspot: Aztec cattle...
A report on new research showing that Arizona Bald Eagles are expanding their ranges to include regions of the Northwestern United States. A description of how birds conform to Zipf's Law, a pattern of communication commonly observed in human language where a few words are used very frequently while many words are used rarely. Those words (sounds in the case of birds) are simplified to make the communication process faster and more efficient. A Western Resource Associates statement on the con...
A report on the Colorado River Oxbow Bridge collapse August 8, 2025. The bridge connected Cibola, Arizona to Palo Verde, California in the vicinity of the Cibola Wildlife Refuge. A description of the Sierra Madre Occidental, a unique high elevation mountain region along extreme western Mexico and parts of California and Arizona. Bird of the episode: American Kestrel. Birding Hotspot: Arizona State University Research Park. Friend of Wildlife: Arizona Solar Center.
Arizona Game and Fish Department is receiving reports of coyotes and other canids with Canine Distemper, an infectious and sometimes fatal disease that, while not a threat to humans can be transmitted to unvaccinated dogs and other pets exposed to wild canids in suburban parks and other urban areas. Symptoms are similar to behavior of animals with rabies. An in depth description of the unique ecosystems that comprise the Mojave and Sonoran desert regions of the Southwestern U.S. Bird of the e...
Scientists have discovered that plants and animals, primarily insects but including birds, communicate by exchanging information through sound. This development has upended long-held scientific assumptions and is generating new lines of research on inter-species communication that could lead to dramatic changes in understanding animal and plant ecology. Lesser Goldfinches, common in Arizona, are expanding their range to the west and northwest where they were once a rarity. Ornithologists thin...
Recently ornithologists have determined that Black-capped and Mountain Chickadees, both familiar to Arizona birders, are interbreeding in the state altering certain behavioral and appearance characteristics known to both. A report on night moths that serve as important forage for night birds and bats. Bird of the episode: Pinyon Jay. Birding Hotspot: Quigley State Wildlife Management Area. Friend of Wildlife: Paradise Mountain Preserve Trust.
Birding web cams are growing in popularity, and some ornithologists think they may soon begin to make significant contributions to bird science. Bird of the episode: Band-tailed Pigeon. Birding hotspot: Upper Little Colorado River IBA. Friend of wildlife: Northern Arizona Climbing Coalition.
Birds are classified scientifically using a system devised by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus during the 18th Century. That system, titled Systema Naturae in Latin, has been adopted internationally. It undergoes constant revision as new species of plants and animals are encountered and previously known species require updating. This episode is an introduction to classification of organisms scientifically as well as among Indigenous cultures in Arizona. Bird of the episode: Black-he...
A report on progress being made in documenting bird species found in underbirded area of Arizona. Bird of the episode: American White Pelican. Birding hotspot: Coon Bluff in the Tonto National Forest. Friend of wildlife: Arizona Forest and Fire Management.
An in-depth look at the Bald Eagle, native to North America and historically considered to be the epitome of avian dominance. But it is a complicated story that may not be so simple, or accurate. A report on the California Fan Palm, the the only palm native to Arizona and a favorite of some bird species for nesting, brooding and foraging. Bird of the episode: Black Rail. Birding hotspot: Pinaleno Mountains IBA. Friend of wildlife: Prescott Creek area volunteers.
Report on a movement to reconsider rules - or lack of them - regarding extraction of water from Arizona aquifers as wells in some parts of the state run dry. A report on the surprising presence of fireflies in Arizona. Bird of the episode: American Goldfinch. Birding hotspot: Joshua Tree Important Bird Area (IBA) in the Mojave Desert in western Arizona. Friend of wildlife: Wild at Heart in Cave Creek.
A report on Swinhoe's White-eye, a small Asian songbird that has become established in parts of California and may be headed for Arizona and other parts of North America as well. Bird of the episode: the Neotropic Cormorant. Birding hotspot: Alamo Lake State Park. Friend of wildlife: Animal Defense League of Arizona.
A report on the domestication of the American Turkey whose origins date back nearly 1,000 years in the four-corners region of the Southwest where Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah come together. Indigenous people known as Anisazi are known to have domesticated birds. They predated the Aztecs who are often credited with domesticating the turkey. Bird of the episode: Arizona Woodpecker. Birding hotspot: Watson and Willow Lake IBA, Prescott. Friends of wildlife: Center for Nature and Place ...
A perspective on how smartphone bird detection software may diminish the birding experience for some birders. A report by Arizona Game and Fish Department on the lack of Chronic Wasting Disease on the Arizona deer population. The disease is known to be an issue throughout the Southwest, but not here in Arizona. Bird of the episode: Black-headed Grosbeak. Birding hotspot: Mogollon Rim Snowmelt Draw. Friend of wildlife: Central Arizona Chapter for Conservation Biology.
A report on research indicating that the growing proliferation of hummingbird feeders may be causing evolutionary changes in the length and size of the Anna's Hummingbird bill, perhaps that of other species as well. Bird of the episode: Lark Sparrow. Birding hotspot: San Rafael Grasslands in southern Arizona. Friends of wildlife: Patagonia Area Resource Alliance.
A report by AXIOS/Phoenix on birds that appear to be disappearing from Arizona, among them the official Arizona State bird, the Cactus Wren. News about habitat restoration activity in southeastern Arizona. An update on Northern Arizona Audubon's new MOTUS bird detection station near Flagstaff. Bird of the episode: American Coot. Birding hotspot: Sabino Canyon Tanque Verde ecosystem. Friends of wildlife: Arizona Master Naturalists Development Program.
Research evidence is mounting that hearing bird songs in the wild as well as touching and smelling, even tasting many plants in their natural states is good for human health. A report on Audubon Southwest's recent water resource tour for Arizona local, state and federal policymakers. Bird of the episode: American Avocet. Birding hotspot: Lower Salt and Gila River ecosystem IBA. Friend of wildlife: Western Field Ornithologists.
Tips and tricks to get the most from your experiences for those new to birding. News from Arizona Game and Fish Department regarding wildlife conservation and welfare. David Allen Sibley on Chickadees. Bird of the episode: Black Phoebe. Birding hotspot: Quigley State Wildlife Management Area. Friend of Wildlife: the Urban Bird Foundation.
New research findings on migratory habits of the Desert Purple Martin, a rare breeder in the deserts of southeastern Arizona, from Jennie McFarland, Bird Conservation Biologist at Tucson Bird Alliance. Bird of the episode: Western Osprey. Birding hotspot: Mittry Lake Wildlife Management Area. Friends of wildlife: Friends of the Santa Cruz River.