Zenaida asiatica
Description:
The Whitewing Dove (Zenaida asiatica) is another of those species that seems to be moving North. 30 years ago they were unheard of at this latitude and altitude. Now they're commonplace, even resident, in the Verde Valley of Central Arizona. This is the normal "sittin' around in a tree telling the neighbors I'm alive" call. Excuse the noise - it's from "downsampling".
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life (creatures)
- Cellular (cellular organisms)
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- Opisthokonta (opisthokonts)
- Metazoa (Animal)
- Bilateria
- Deuterostomia (deuterostomes)
- Chordata (Chordates)
- Vertebrata (vertebrates)
- Gnathostomata (jawed fish)
- Osteichthyes
- Sarcopterygii (Lobe-finned fishes)
- Tetrapoda (terrestrial vertebrates)
- Amniota (amniotes)
- Reptilia (Reptiles)
- Diapsida (diapsid)
- Archosauromorpha (archosauromorph)
- Archosauria (Archosaurs)
- Dinosauria (dinosaurs and birds)
- Saurischia
- Theropoda (theropods)
- Tetanurae (tetanuran theropod)
- Coelurosauria (coelurosaur)
- Maniraptoriformes
- Maniraptora (maniraptoran)
- Aves (birds)
- Ornithurae
- Neornithes
- Neognathae (Neognaths)
- Neoaves
- Columbiformes (doves)
- Columbidae (pigeons and doves)
- Zenaida
- Paraves
- Zenaida asiatica (White-winged Dove)
This sound is not featured in any collections.
Source Information
- license
- cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
- copyright
- Douglas Von Gausig
- Recorder
- Douglas Von Gausig, Naturesongs.com
- original
- original media file
- visit source
- partner site
- Animal Diversity Web
- ID