Nocturnal bioacoustic survey in the mountains of Beijing, spring 2026

Every spring in Beijing, the hills are alive with the sound of music!

This year I set up a sound recorder on a forested hillside in Mentougou District at an elevation of c1,700m asl.  The idea was to capture the sounds of spring, including nocturnal spring migrants and summer breeders.  It was also a chance to gain insights into the arrival dates of some of the breeding species and to explore how the species richness evolves through the spring.

The Wildlife Acoustics Song Meter Mini digital recorder was active from 28 March to 13 June and recorded from sunset to one hour after sunrise (automatically adjusted).   

Key Information:

  • From 903 recordings over 78 nights, 84 bird species and 4 mammal species were recorded, with a few additional vocalisations not assigned to species level. 
  • The night of 6 May was the peak in terms of species richness, with 28 taxa recorded that night/early morning.
  • Perhaps unexpectedly, several shorebird species were recorded, including Black-winged Stilt (Himantopus himantopus 黑翅长脚鹬 Hēi chì cháng jiǎo yù), Pied Avocet (Recurvirostra avosetta 反嘴鹬 Fǎn zuǐ yù), Greater Sand Plover (Anarhynchus leschenaultii 铁嘴沙鸻 Tiě zuǐ shā héng) – see below – and Whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus 中杓鹬 Zhōng biāo yù)
  • Lesser Cuckoo (Cuculus poliocephalus 小杜鹃 Xiǎo dù juān) recorded on 8 and 12 June
  • Japanese Scops Owl (Otus semitorques 北领角鸮 Běi lǐng jiǎo xiāo) recorded on five nights between 7 April and 18 May – see below
  • Grey-backed Thrush (Turdus hortulorum 灰背鸫 Huī bèi dōng) recorded singing between 7 and 12 May – listen out for it in the dawn chorus recording below
  • Brown Eared-Pheasant (Crossoptilon mantchuricum, 褐马鸡 Hè mǎ jī) 
    recorded on 31 March and 22 April

Below you can explore the results via an interactive graphic.  For example, if you would like to know when Asian Stubtail (Urosphena squameiceps 鳞头树莺 Lín tóu shù yīng) was first detected, simply click on the species and you will be able to see the first and last dates detected, the number of detections and also the peak hour for that species.

Some selected highlights

The recording of several waterbird species at a mountain location may reflect the relatively close proximity of Guanting Reservoir – it is possible that nocturnal migrants begin to vocalise when they see the reflection of this large water body?

The recording of Greater Sand Plover (Anarhynchus leschenaultii 铁嘴沙鸻 Tiě zuǐ shā héng) was a bit of a surprise.  It is even possible to hear a song element in the recording below.


 Another surprise was Gull-billed Tern (Gelochelidon nilotica 鸥嘴噪鸥 Ōu zuǐ zào ōu).  Recorded on 3 May 2026.

 Japanese Scops Owl (Otus semitorques 北领角鸮 Běi lǐng jiǎo xiāo) is a species that remains a bit of an enigma in Beijing and is only rarely recorded.  In the clip below are three examples of one of the more common vocalisations – a downward-inflected series of hoots – recorded on two separate dates (30 April and 16 May) but merged into one clip.  No song was recorded this spring at the survey site.

 

Oriental Scops Owl (Otus sunia 红角鸮 Hóng jiǎo xiāo) was recorded an impressive 222 times over 45 nights, with the peak coming just after dusk.  On several occasions, I heard an unfamiliar shrill call immediately after a burst of familiar song.  Initially baffled, I realised after reading this article from The Sound Approach about European Scops Owl that it was a copulation call.  Listen to the example below with two birds singing (a pair?), gradually becoming more strident before the copulation call at the end.

 

Additionally, there was one intriguing pulsed vocalisation that is reminiscent of Asian Barred Owlet (Glaucidium cuculoides 斑头鸺鹠 Bān tóu xiū liú).  Have a listen below.  Although superficially similar to this species, there are some anomalies, including the pulse rate and frequency structure, that make it atypical and lead me to leave it unidentified.  Comments and suggestions about the identity of the vocaliser are welcome!

Edit: Thanks to Liu Shuangqi, it seems possible that this pulsed vocalisation originates from an amphibian and, specifically, Bombina orientalis (Oriental Fire-bellied Toad).  Although audio recordings of this species are few, there is a YouTube video including the so-called ‘release call’ of a similar species – Bombina variegata – that is a close match.    
 

 

The Dawn Chorus

Below is a 5-minute compilation of the dawn chorus, including roughly thirty seconds from each of several dates through the spring.  It begins with an atmospheric calling Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes  赤狐 Chi Hu) in the dark of night, followed by snippets from 30 March, 15 April, 30 April, some selected highlights from three thrush species in early May, followed by more clips from 21 May, 1 June and ending with one of the latest species to arrive – the Lesser Cuckoo (Cuculus poliocephalus 小杜鹃 Xiǎo dù juān) – on 12 June.  The recording illustrates how the dawn chorus evolves as spring progresses.

 

I hope you enjoy the recording and also delving into the data below.  By clicking on a species, more data will be revealed, including first and last dates recorded and peak hour.

 

Summary of spring 2026 

 

Northern Boobook

Northern Boobok, Beijing, 4 June 2013.  Taken using my Canon EOS 7D on ISO 6400 and handheld!
Northern Boobok, Beijing, 4 June 2013. Taken using my Canon EOS 7D and 400mm lens on ISO 6400 and handheld!

After a tip-off, Paul Holt, Alice Carfrae and I spent yesterday evening looking for an owl…  not just any owl but a Northern Boobook (formerly known as Brown Hawk Owl but now ‘split’ into a species in its own right).  We arrived on site at 6pm and, after a short walk, we soon heard and saw, spectacularly well, this lovely owl: the first time I have ever seen this uncommon species.  Unfortunately it was an overcast evening, meaning the light was poor for photography, but it was also very still, enabling us to hear it well.

Although we only saw one bird, it was clear that there were two birds present, probably a pair, with the other bird (a female?) calling at a slightly different pitch.

We were then told about a nearby breeding pair of Oriental Scops Owl and, sure enough, after a 5-minute walk, we were watching and listening to one of these small owls in the company of a few uncomfortably large, low flying bats.  Although Oriental Scops Owl is a migrant in good numbers through Beijing, we didn’t know it bred….

There is so little we know about the birds in the capital, let alone the rest of China….!

Dalian – Day Three

Day Three at Dalian was the day that Laotieshan began to deliver in style.  In one 5-minute period between 0810 and 0815 we saw a White-throated Needletail, a Japanese Waxwing and a Rufous-bellied Woodpecker all fly in off the sea and head inland… followed very closely by a Merlin!  Wow..

The day began at 0530 at the lighthouse and, as on the first full day, we began by birding the track that runs north-east below the lighthouse.  On the entrance track we found a Rufous-tailed Robin and, almost immediately afterwards, flushed a Grey Nightjar.  Then, just before we began to walk north-east we disturbed a thrush from the verge and, after it flew a short distance, we could see it was a superb Grey-backed Thrush.  Not a bad start!

The track below the lighthouse was in shade and it was relatively quiet with just a Siberian Blue Robin, a couple of Asian Brown Flycatchers, an Ashy Minivet and a few Meadow and Tristram’s Buntings.  The sun hits this area between 0730 and 0800 so we discussed whether, on balance, it was probably better to cover another area first thing and then return here later in the morning.  After our experience in the hours that followed, we will almost certainly heed this thought when we return to Laotieshan from our northern wader sojourn on Saturday.

The reason is that we discovered a fantastic clearing on the ridge from where to watch visible migration and, between 0830 and 1030, we saw an additional 2 White-throated Needletails (off the sea and past me at head height!) and 3 House Martins (scarce in northern China), one of which was definitely a Northern House Martin and the other two not identified as either Northern or Asian.  The supporting cast included 47 Fork-tailed (Pacific) Swifts, 18 Amur Falcons, 700+ Barn Swallows, 70+ Red-rumped Swallows, 15 Sand Martins, a single Merlin, 8 Hobbies, 3 Eurasian Sparrowhawks, a single Chestnut Bunting, 6 White-eyes (not identified to species) and 3 Chinese Pond Herons.  On the slope we found two more White-throated Rock Thrushes (in a different location to yesterday) and on the way down I flushed an Oriental Scops Owl which perched briefly before flying off into dense cover.

It was with a heavy heart that we left Laotieshan at 1100 to travel to Dalian to meet up with Tom Beeke to cover the Jinshitan Fish Ponds in the afternoon ahead of our big wader day on Saturday (at Pikou).  After meeting up with Tom, the Fish Ponds produced a stunning Sharp-tailed Sandpiper which Tom had found previously as well as 2 distant Chinese Egrets, 28 Pacific Golden Plover in stunning summer plumage, a large and close-knit flock of 65 large white-headed gulls seemingly migrating west (probably Vega but I need to check the images) as well as 3 Oriental Honey Buzzards, Chinese Penduline Tits, Oriental Reed Warbler, Zitting Cisticola etc etc..

After fantastic home-made pizza with Tom and his family, we arrived at our Jinshitan hotel at about 8.30pm and I’m writing this before I hit my bed and try to get as much sleep as possible before our 0430 start tomorrow, so apologies if this reads a little awkwardly!

White-throated Needletail, Laotieshan, 13 May 2011. Needletails are powerful flyers with a very different flying action to that of Fork-tailed Swifts
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper, Jinshitan, 13 May 2011. A very smart wader.
Oriental Scops Owl, Laotieshan, 13 May 2011

Full species list (in chronological order):

Laotieshan (0530-1100)

Amur Falcon (18)

Brown Shrike (14)

Great Tit (4)

Rufous-tailed Robin (1)

Grey Nightjar (1)

Grey Wagtail (3)

Grey-backed Thrush (1)

Chinese Bulbul (5)

Pallas’s Warbler (5)

Taiga Flycatcher (2)

Yellow-browed Warbler (12)

Oriental Greenfinch (6)

Richard’s Pipit (5)

Olive-backed Pipit (18) – most very early morning

Dusky Warbler (4)

Fork-tailed Swift (55)

Ashy Minivet (3)

Siberian Stonechat (2)

Tristram’s Bunting (2)

Barn Swallow (coming in off the sea at the rate of 350+ per hour)

Red-rumped Swallow (in off the sea at a rate of c35 per hour)

Asian Brown Flycatcher (2)

Radde’s Warbler (9)

Siberian Blue Robin (3)

Black-tailed Gull (150+ offshore)

Heuglin’s Gull ssp taimyrensis (1)

Yellow Wagtail (1)

Chinese Pond Heron (3)

Meadow Bunting (5)

Siberian Rubythroat (1)

Hobby (8)

White-throated Rock Thrush (2)

Common Pheasant (1)

White-throated Needletail (3) – in off sea (1 at 0810 and 2 at 1030)

Rufous-bellied Woodpecker (1) – in off sea and continued north

Japanese Waxwing (1) – in off sea and continued north

Merlin (1)

Chestnut Bunting (1)

Eurasian Sparrowhawk (3)

Chinese Hill Warbler (2)

Yellow-rumped Flycatcher (1)

Sand Martin (15)

Northern House Martin (1)

House Martin sp (either Asian or Northern)  (2)

White-eye sp (6)

Oriental Scops Owl (1)

Black Drongo (2) – at the point, feeding actively and almost certainly fresh in.

Jinshitan Fish Ponds (1530-1900)

Chinese Spot-billed Duck (4)

Chinese Egret (2)

Hobby (2)

White Wagtail (2)

Whimbrel (2)

Siberian Stonechat (3)

Yellow Wagtail (3) including one of the subspecies taivana)

Sand Martin (5)

Zitting Cisticola (1)

Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (1)

Common Sandpiper (1)

Greenshank (12)

Black-winged Stilt (2)

Pacific Golden Plover (28)

Marsh Sandpiper (1)

Peregrine (1)

Eastern Marsh Harrier (2)

Chinese Penduline Tit (3)

Large white-headed gull sp (65) – all in one flock at 1635 moving west

Gadwall (2)

Black-browed Reed Warbler (1)

Amur Falcon (2)

Oriental Reed Warbler (1)

Oriental Honey Buzzard (3)

Magpie (5)

Fork-tailed Swift (8)

Grey Heron (2)

Barn Swallow (34)

Little Ringed Plover (2)

Vinous-throated Parrotbill (12)

Grey Wagtail (1)

Kestrel (1)