Eastern Whip-poor-will
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Eastern
Whip-poor-will, (Antrostomus vociferus), is a medium-sized
(22–27 cm) nightjar bird from North and Central America. The whip-poor-will is commonly
heard within its range, but less often seen because of its superior camouflage. It is named onomatopoeically after its song.[1]
Description
These
medium-sized nightjars measure 22–27 cm (8.7–11 in) in length, span
45–50 cm (18–20 in) across the wings and weigh 42–69 g
(1.5–2.4 oz).[2] Among standard measurements, the wing chord is
14.7 to 16.9 cm (5.8 to 6.7 in), the tail is 10.5 to 12.8 cm (4.1 to
5.0 in), the bill is 1 to 1.4 cm (0.39 to 0.55 in) and the tarsus is 1.5 to 1.8 cm (0.59 to 0.71 in).[3] Adults have mottled plumage: the
upperparts are grey, black and brown; the lower parts are grey and black. They
have a very short bill and a black throat. Males have a white patch below the
throat and white tips on the outer tail feathers; in the female, these parts
are light brown.
This bird is
sometimes confused[4] with the related Chuck-will's-widow
(Antrostomus carolinensis) which has a similar but lower-pitched and
slower call.
Ecology
Their habitat
is deciduous or mixed woods across western, central and southeastern Canada, eastern United States, and Central America. Northern birds migrate to the southeastern United States and
south to Central America.
Central American races are largely resident. These birds forage at night,
catching insects in flight, and normally sleep during the day. Whip-poor-wills
nest on the ground, in shaded locations among dead leaves, and usually lay two
eggs at a time. The bird will commonly remain on the nest unless almost stepped
upon.
The Eastern
Whip-poor-will is becoming locally rare. Several reasons for the decline are
proposed, such as habitat destruction,
predation by feral
cats
and dogs, and poisoning by insecticides, but the actual causes remain
elusive.[5] Still, the species as a whole is not
considered globally threatened due to its large range.[6]
The
Whip-poor-will has been split into two species. Eastern populations are now
referred to as the Eastern Whip-poor-will. The disjunct population in
southwestern United States and Mexico is now referred to as the Mexican Whip-poor-will,
Caprimulgus arizonae. The two species having different ranges and
vocalizations, the eggs having different coloration, and DNA sequencing showing
enough differentiation, it was determined enough evidence was available to
separate the two types into different species.[7]
Cultural references
In literature
Due to its
haunting, ethereal song, the Eastern Whip-poor-will is the topic of numerous
legends. One New England legend says
the whip-poor-will can sense a soul departing, and can capture it as it flees.
This is used as a plot device in H. P. Lovecraft's story The Dunwich Horror.
This is likely related to an earlier Native American and general American folk
belief that the singing of the birds is a death omen.[8] This is also referred by Whip-poor-will,
a short story by James Thurber, in
which the constant nighttime singing of a whippoorwill results in maddening
insomnia of the protagonist Mr Kinstrey who eventually loses his mind and kills
everyone in his house, including himself. The bird also features, however, in The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point, a poem
by the English poet Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, in which the outcast speaker asks: "Could the
whip-poor-will or the cat of the glen/Look into my eyes and be bold?" [9]
It is also
frequently used as an auditory symbol of rural America, as in Washington Irving's story The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow, or as a plot device. For example, William Faulkner's short story, "Barn
Burning", makes several mentions of whippoorwills, e.g.: "and then he
found that he had been asleep because he knew it was almost dawn, the night
almost over. He could tell that from the whippoorwills. They were everywhere
now among the dark trees below him, constant and inflectioned and ceaseless, so
that, as the instant for giving over to the day birds drew nearer and nearer,
there was no interval at all between them." [10] "The Mountain Whippoorwill"
is the title of a poem written by Stephen Vincent Benet about a fiddling
contest, won by Hillbilly Jim, who refers to his fiddle as a whippoorwill and
identifies the bird with the lonely and poor but vibrant life of the mountain
people.
In music
Whip-poor-wills
are mentioned in numerous notable songs.
- "Alone
& Forsaken", by Hank Williams, Sr. -
"The roses have faded, there's
frost at my door /
The birds in the morning don't sing
anymore
The grass in the valley is starting to
die
And out in the darkness the
whippoorwills cry."
- "As
Above, So Below", by Klaxons -
"A whiporwhil will in flight,
turns east towards westphalia."
- "Brand
New Angel", performed by Jeff Bridges on the 2009 soundtrack Crazy Heart
- "A
Cockeyed Optimist", from the musical South Pacific
written by Rodgers and
Hammerstein
- "Call
of the Whip-Poor-Will", by the Stapleton Brothers
- "Deeper
Than The Holler", by Randy Travis
- "I'm
So Lonesome I Could Cry", by Hank Williams
- "I
Got A Name" by Jim Croce
- "I
Still Like Bologna", by Alan Jackson
- "If
the World Had a Front Porch", by Tracy Lawrence on his 1994 album I See it
Now
- "Kennesaw
Line", by Don Oja-Dunaway, sung by Claire
Lynch and the Front Porch String Band, references the legend of
the whippoorwill as an omen of death (see Sam Watkins).
- "Little
Bird, Little Bird", by Elizabeth
Mitchell, mentioned the whippoorwill alongside various other
birds
- "The
Littlest Birds", by The Be Good Tanyas
- "Lonesome",
a song by Dr. Dog from their 2012 album Be The Void
- "Magnolia",
a song by J J Cale from his 1971 album Naturally.
- "Magpie
to the Morning", by Neko Case
- "Midnight
in Montgomery", by Alan Jackson
- "Mockingbird
Hill", by Patti Page and Burl Ives and the group Les Paul and Mary
Ford.
- "Moliannwn"
Traditional Welsh
- "Mr.
Ting-a-ling (Steel Guitar Man)" by George Morgan
- "My
Blue Heaven", by Walter Donaldson/George A. Whiting,[11]
- "My
Blue Ridge Mountain Boy", by Dolly Parton
- "My
Home Among the Hills", by E.W.
James Jr
- "My
Rifle, My Pony and Me", sung by Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson from the film Rio Bravo
- "Peace
a Dime", composed by Charles Brooks in 2005
- "Philadelphia
Freedom", a 1975 number-one hit by Elton John
- "Sad,
Sad Song", by M. Ward
- "So
Says the Whippoorwill", by Richard Shindell
- "Songs
About Texas", by Pat Green
- "Sounds
So Good", by Ashton Shepherd
- "Sunday
In the South", by Shenandoah
- "Talking
to the Moon" by Don Henley, from
his 1982 album I Can't Stand Still
- "Tammy"
by Debbie Reynolds
- "That
Sunday, That Summer", by Nat King Cole
- "Trouble
Won't Last Always" by Glossary (2011)
- "Up
on the Ridge" (2010) by Dierks Bentley
- "The
Verdant Mile", by contemporary folk legend Tracy Grammer
- "Whip-poor-will",
by Magnolia Electric
Co.
- "Whiporwill",
by the Ozark Mountain
Daredevils
- "Whiporwill",
by Storyhill
- "The
Whippoorwill", by Walela
- "Nothing
But A Whiporwill", by Blue Highway
- "Whiporwill"
by Doug Burr
on the album On Promenade
- "Why
Don't You Just Go Home" by Greg Brown
on the album "Slant 6 Mind"
- "Daniel
and The Sacred Harp" by The Band on the album Stage Fright
- "Bed
of my Chevy" by Justin Moore
- "Hear
the Whippoorwill Sing" by Roger
D. Cranford
- "Painted
Bird" by Siouxsie and the Banshees on 'A Kiss in the Dreamhouse'
- "Willows
and Whippoorwills" by Caïna on 'Temporary Antennae'
- "Speed
of the Whippoorwill" by Chatham County Line on the album "Speed
of the Whippoorwill"
- "Jesse
Like Birds" by Carrie Elkin on
'Call it My Garden'.
- "Country
Is" by Tom T Hall on the
album 'Country Is' 1975.
- "Bandit"
by Birdcloud on their self-titled 2011 EP.
- "The
Title Song" by Okkervil River
on the album "The Stage Names".
- "The
Whipoorwill" by Blackberry Smoke on the album The Whipoorwill [2012]
- "Whippoorwill"
by Annuals on the
album 'Time Stamp'.
Location
Nearby Lion's Head, Ontario,
Whippoorwill Road has been named due to the bird's common distribution in that
region. Whippoorwill Bay is also named near that location, as part of Isthmus
Bay, closed by the cliffs named 'White Bluff' and Lion's Head .
Onscreen
- In the
1934 Frank Capra film It Happened One
Night, before Clark Gable's character Peter Warne reveals
his name to Ellie Andrews (Claudette Colbert),
he famously says to her: "I am the whip-poor-will that cries in the
night".[12]
- Numerous
episodes of the TV series The Waltons.
- In the 2006 film Open Season, the character Elliot does a whip-poor-will sound while they are trying to steal stuff from Bob & Bobbie's trailer.
The entire wiki
link can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Whip-poor-will
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