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Loon Magic - Wayzata Technology (8011) (1993).iso
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06wildmi.txt
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1993-07-25
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A Time to Listen
It is difficult to believe that the loon's incredible range of sounds
come from a simple organ, the syrinx, in the lower part of the
windpipe. So much music, so much meaning. Is it all territorial
instinct or could loons be calling, partly at least, to express joy? I've
never counted calls during a frenzied evening chorus. Each loon must
call hundreds, if not thousands, of times. Could each call have a
biological function? Most scientists would answer "yes", "probably" or
"we don't have adequate data."
A traditional Ojibwa, Delores Bainbridge, would answer the
question with a definite "no." She hasn't studied loons, but she knows
loons. When an undisturbed loon, for no apparent reason, holds forth
with a half-dozen beautiful wails, she knows that the loon is talking
not only to other loons, but also to every other animal, including
human, willing to listen. Humans in particular should listen carefully.
In 1939, Edward H. Forbush suggested the loon's call seemed
"...wailing and sad as if he were bemoaning his exile from his forest
lake." Little did Forbush know that about half of a century later,
loons would be missing from many of his favorite eastern haunts. It's
time to listen.