Deutsche Tageszeitung - In tune with nature: expert sounds out all of Ireland's bird species

In tune with nature: expert sounds out all of Ireland's bird species


In tune with nature: expert sounds out all of Ireland's bird species
In tune with nature: expert sounds out all of Ireland's bird species / Photo: © AFP

On a mission to record all of Ireland's bird species, many of which are dying out, Irishman Sean Ronayne calls his unique audio archive a tool to both raise alarm and bring hope.

Change text size:

According to conservation bodies, some 63 percent of Ireland's birds are currently either red or amber-listed, meaning they are at severe or moderate extinction risk.

"Birds are in trouble in Ireland like they are across the world, the loss of wildlife -- sonically and physically -- is devastating to me," said the 37-year-old.

"But I focus on hope and beauty, which is essential," the ornithologist told AFP at his home near Cobh (pronounced "Cove") in County Cork.

More than four years into his recording project he has sampled 201 different Irish bird species, stocking over 12,000 audio clips from around the country, Ronayne told AFP.

Just two remain to be documented: the great skua, and red-breasted merganser.

"If people realise just how spectacular wildlife is, there's no way they would let it disappear, attitudes would change," Ronayne said.

- Sound: 'an engaging tool' -

Ireland may be famed for its green fields, but Ronayne paints a bleak picture -- "realistic" he says -- of a degraded landscape and a bird population decimated by vanishing habitats.

Most of Ireland comprises intensively farmed fields bounded by trimmed hedgerows, drained and mined peatlands, overgrazed uplands, and minimal native woodland, he told AFP.

Non-native conifer plantations -- approximately nine percent of Ireland's 11 percent forest cover -- are also a biodiversity villain, described by Ronayne as "a species-poor industrial cash-crop".

"I try to show people the beauty of what we're erasing and what we must stand up and fight for," said the wildlife expert.

Last year he published an award-winning book, released two albums, and made an acclaimed documentary film. His talk tour is currently selling out venues around Ireland.

"Wildlife sound is such a great engaging tool to connect people to nature itself and get them acquainted with everything that's on their doorstep," Ronayne told AFP.

"If you know your neighbour you're more likely to help them in times of need," he said.

At the shows Ronayne, who was diagnosed with a form of autism as an adult, presents the story of his life and how nature is woven through it.

He also plays audio of warbles, tweets, trills, screeches and chirps, and mystery sounds, inviting the audience to guess the origin.

Some clips show birds mimicking other animals like dogs, people and other bird species.

"Some species in my collection can mimic 30 to 40 other species in their song," he said.

Laughter is common at his talks, but also tears and grief as listeners learn of Ireland's endangered birdlife.

- 'Sonic diversity' -

Ronayne regularly holds "dawn chorus" walks, bringing small groups into silent forests far from road noise to experience the birdlife waking up.

A gradually building cacophony of sound, the dawn chorus is "a reflection of the health of a given environment", he told AFP in an old woodland near his home while waiting for sunrise.

"The more sonically diverse it is, the healthier the habitat is," he said.

After unpacking his audio recorder, parabolic microphone and tripod, he quickly identified the melodies of song thrushes, robins, blackbirds, goldcrests and others as they greeted the day.

"Chiffchaff! Did you hear that?! There's a grey wagtail!" he exclaimed, head twitching toward each sound in the lifting gloom.

Ronayne also hides recorders for weeks and even months in remote untouched places where birds congregate.

On Ballycotton beach near Cobh, migrating birds swirled overhead before settling on an adjacent lagoon.

Ronayne carefully placed a waterproof recorder -- able to run for up two weeks -- in grass by the shore.

"They have to fly right over here to there," he said pointing upwards at their route.

"After I collect it I'll be able to monitor the birds, capture their calls, and tell environmental stories from the audio," he said.

Back home, he scrolled on a computer showing thousands of archived sonogram clips -- visual representations of sound -- of birdsong audio.

Each entry included data on the behaviour, calls and protected status of each bird: many either red or amber.

"First we must realise how wonderful nature is, then how fragile it is, and how much we have kicked it down," Ronayne told AFP.

"When we as a society fall back in love with nature, and respect it as we once did, beautiful things will happen."

(A.Stefanowych--DTZ)

Featured

With EuroPride, Lisbon courts LGBTQ travellers

Rainbow flags will fill Lisbon's streets on Saturday when the Portuguese capital hosts the annual EuroPride parade in support of LGBTQ rights which organisers hope will cement its standing as a gay-friendly destination.

Karbon-X and Directions Group Join Forces to Develop a Residential Solar Carbon Project Aligned with Alberta's TIER Program

CALGARY, AB / ACCESS Newswire / June 17, 2025 / Karbon-X Corp. (OTCQX:KARX), a vertically integrated climate solutions company, has entered into a strategic agreement with Directions Group Inc., a Canadian leader in clean energy sales and growth strategy. The partnership will focus on the development and implementation of a residential solar carbon project designed to generate offset credits eligible under Alberta's Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) regulation, one of Canada's most robust compliance carbon pricing systems.

Camino Announces High-Grade Channel Results of 7 Meters @ 4.3% Copper, 25.5 ppm Silver and 18 meters @ 1.57 % Copper and 11.35 ppm Silver at Los Chapitos in Peru

VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESS Newswire / June 17, 2025 / Camino Minerals Corporation (TSXV:COR)(OTC PINK:CAMZF) ("Camino" or the "Company") is pleased to announce high‐grade copper channel results from the Katty prospect located in the Diva Trend, one of several prospective targets at the Company's Los Chapitos Copper Project ("Los Chapitos" or the "Project") in Peru. A total of 12 excavated channels were completed at the prospect and all channels contained significant high-grade intercepts of copper with associated silver (Table 1). Los Chapitos is Camino's second copper project with partner Nittetsu Mining Co, Ltd. ("Nittetsu"), which can earn a 35% interest in Los Chapitos once it completes a total investment of CDN$10 Million (see news release dated June 14, 2023). Rio Tinto, a major copper producer, recently staked claims adjacent to Los Chapitos (see news release dated May 17, 2024). Camino is also advancing its mine development project, the Puquios Copper Project, with Nittetsu Mining in Chile (see news release dated April 17, 2025).

Corsair Signs Strategic Partnership with Kera Energy for Global Distribution of Pyrolysis Oil

New partnership expands global access to Corsair's recycled plastic oil across Europe, Asia, and the Americas.

Change text size: