Last March while birding along Panama’s Pipeline Road we heard a sound that reminded me of home.
The bird was loud and its sound was tropical — not a Pennsylvania bird — but something about it seemed familiar.
Here’s what we heard:
Our guide identified it as the rufous piha (Lipaugus unirufus) a member of the Cotinga family.
So why was his song familiar?
I used to hear a similar sound in the Wetlands Room at the National Aviary. The sound is gone now — the bird passed away — but for many years his voice defined that room.
The screaming piha (Lipaugus vociferans) is a member of the Cotinga family native to the Amazon. The bird looks boring but his voice is not.
It’s too bad he’s no longer with us at the National Aviary. His voice from the Amazon reminds me of Pittsburgh.
(photo of rufous piha by Amy E. McAndrews on Flickr, Creative Commons license; photo of screaming piha from Wikimedia Commons; audio from Xeno Canto. Click on the captions to see the originals.)
I miss the Aviary piha too!