I do live in a town but next to my house is a small group of treees that are host to some woodpigeons.They are regularly disturbed by me or by dogs and their owners. Having heard the alarm calls of blackbirds, thrushes and robins etc. I found it odd that there appears to be no alarm call from Woodpigeons when disturbed. However when they fly off is seems like an explosion and there is always the clatter of wings on wings or wings on tree branches. Is this sound deliberatly used by the pigeons instead of an alarm call or is it just the result of an extremely urgent take off?. I assume that they normaly sit tight until the very last moment or until the threat is over.
Having flown off they only go away a few tens of yards before resuming a perch on another tree or returning to the same tree after a circling flight.
I now think that in asking the question I have answered the question ... the urgent launching into flight creates the noise whether deliberate or not and acts as a signal to other birds and animals and is therefore the equivalent of an alarm call.
Any comments?
Having flown off they only go away a few tens of yards before resuming a perch on another tree or returning to the same tree after a circling flight.
I now think that in asking the question I have answered the question ... the urgent launching into flight creates the noise whether deliberate or not and acts as a signal to other birds and animals and is therefore the equivalent of an alarm call.
Any comments?