Excellent discussion on the use of playbacks…I'd like to weigh in…

Full disclosure: I regularly use playbacks in my photography work, and have 
done for many years. 

Certainly my use has temporarily taken various individual birds away from their 
primary focus of finding enough food for themselves and defending territories 
etc. But, like John Confer, I am of the opinion that judicious use probably has 
little long term effect. BUT…playing the call/song should be kept to a minimum. 
One of the most important things I tell people when the topic of playbacks 
comes up for use in bird photography, is that it's important to know when to 
turn off the playback. And the answer is sooner rather than later. The bird 
will quickly go back to its normal behavior after the playback stops, and 
that's what photographers want (or should want, anyway): to photograph NATURAL 
behavior. If the playback continues, the bird becomes agitated and any student 
of bird behavior will be able to tell that from the image(s). If you see photos 
of male birds fluttering their wings, leaning down, gaping at the viewer, then 
the call is being used too much…that is a stressed bird. Maybe surprisingly, 
such photos have occasionally won contests because people don't realize what is 
going on, and certainly such photos are very dramatic and eye-catching.

I once watched two photographers in FLorida playing a playback over and over 
again (for hours actually) to force a hapless Barred Owl to fly back and forth 
over a road so they could take photos of it in flight. At first I was compelled 
to join in…wow!...such an "easy" subject... but after a while I became sickened 
by the whole affair and left. This was a bird that is well known to 
photographers in FL, so gets visited constantly to "perform", year after year. 

A similar issue arrises with rare birds like the Elegant Trogons in Arizona 
(yes?)…until the use of playbacks was banned they were visited again and again. 
It's this repeated bugging of a bird by many groups of people that we want to 
avoid. Brief, occasional playbacks should not be too much of a problem, in my 
opinion..

Marie


Marie Read Wildlife Photography
452 Ringwood Road
Freeville NY  13068 USA

Phone  607-539-6608
e-mail   [email protected]

http://www.marieread.com

Author of Sierra Wings: Birds of the Mono Lake Basin    Available here:

http://marieread.photoshelter.com/gallery/Sierra-Wings-Birds-of-the-Mono-Lake-Basin/G0000NlCxX37uTzE
________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] on behalf of John Confer 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 12, 2014 11:33 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] playback tapes

Steve raised a concern about the use of audio playback for personal
gain, not related to scientific study. I think it is important to think
of the consequences of our activities on wildlife, and I appreciate
Steve raising this concern.
     I did 34 years of field study of Golden-winged Warblers, more than
half of it requiring the capture and banding of birds with individual
markers, without which the research data could not have been obtained.
I have probably had more hours of field experience, probably hundreds of
hours, using playing audio calls to attract birds into nets than anyone
in this community. I intensively played audios back to catch some
individual males.  I was willing to accept some bird fatality to obtain
the data that can be used for the conservation of the entire species.
That seemed a fair trade. I do recall 3 or 4 nests where nest checking
caused mortality. I do recall banding that caused perhaps two
fatalities. I DO NOT RECALL ANY BIRD THAT ABANDONED ITS NEST, LOST A
MATE OF AN ESTABLISHED PAIR, OR DESERTED A TERRITORY OUT OF A THOUSAND
ATTEMPTS TO CATCH AND BAND A BIRD USING AUDIO PLAYBACK. My work involved
relating nesting success to environmental factors and I did everything
reasonable to reduce the chances that my activities would harm the
birds……...
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