Northern Mockingbird
One of its most impressive tricks is sounding like it's whistling. This bird is about 10 inches in length with greyish-brown upper parts and white under parts. You'll also notice long white wing bars and a long tail.
Swainson's Thrushes also have a thin, high-pitched, single-note whine similar to that of American Robin.
American Wigeons are one of the more vocal dabbling ducks. Males give slow, high-pitched whistles year-round: during courtship, when sensing danger or disturbance, and as contact calls. Their 3-parted nasal whistle sounds a bit like someone softly blowing through a kazoo.
Pied Currawong – Whistles (Merriwa)
Willie Wagtails often sing through the night, especially in spring and summer and on moonlit nights. Recorded in Wollemi National Park, New South Wales. Willie Wagtail Calls & Song. The sounds of a Willie Wagtail singing in the Australian bush.
Lyrebird in Australia perfectly mimics crying baby - YouTube. Not many birds can compare to the vocal range of the Australian lyrebird, and Taronga Zoo's lyrebird, Echo, is no exception.
The hoots have a deep, pure tone, with females' voices higher than males. To stay in contact, mated pairs also emit a hollow whistling sound that rises in pitch at the end. Fledged young give a similar high-pitched whistle to beg for food.
Porcupines can sound like babies in the dark, video shows | Centre Daily Times.
Hermit Thrush
With a lilting song filled with musical whistles and warbles that almost sounds like a flute, this bird is easy to hear, and it often sings very late in the evening or early in the morning.
Carolina Wren (loud and clear)”tea kettle, tea kettle, tea kettle!” or “cheeseburger, cheeseburger, cheeseburger!”
Carolina wrens are often heard, not seen. The distinctive 'teakettle, teakettle, teakettle' (or 'germany, germany germany' or 'tweedle, tweedle, tweedle') Carolina wren call rings out through forested areas and wooded backyards in the eastern U.S. Their voices can carry quite a distance.
Marmots. Most marmots—found in mountainous areas in North America, Asia, and Europe—are social, using loud whistles to communicate with each other, earning many species the nickname “whistle pig.”
Also known as a "water pipe" or "water warble," these bird whistles are a classic novelty. Bird whistles were popular with 18th-century children and adults. To use, simply fill the whistle with water and then blow gently through it.
Tooters. Tooters tend to be smaller owls such as Northern Saw-whet Owls, Boreal Owls, Western Screech-owls, and Eastern Screech-owls. These toots are usually high in pitch and may be heard as clear whistles or quavering toot-like hoos.
Owls mostly hoot to tell other owls that they are occupying a specific territory and that visitors are not welcome. They may also hoot to attract a mate and strengthen their pair bond, however. Owls are capable of a wide variety of different vocalizations, ranging from whistling and chirping to hooting and grunting.
As such, owls often are symbols of security. When you hear an owl near your home, this is a good omen that you are in a place of safety. The owl recognizes your home as a sanctuary built on sound foundations. It can also symbolize abundance.
Improperly installed windows, worn weather stripping, changes in temperature and the simple passage of time can all cause an unwanted whistling inside the house. Not only is the sound annoying, it can also lead to energy waste.
These pests will make clicking noises when they're trying to attract mates and hissing or growling sounds when they feel threated. Baby opossums make noises that sound like sneezing when trying to get their parents' attention. Outside of these special circumstances, though, the pests rarely make audible sounds.
Katydids and crickets are excellent examples of nighttime noise-making insects. These insects, which belong to the same Order (Orthoptera) make noises in similar ways: by rubbing their wings together. These insects usually make their high pitched chirping noise at night to attract mates or to warn off predators.
Which bird makes this distinctive sound? It's a Kookaburra! The loud distinctive call of the laughing kookaburra is widely used as a stock sound effect in situations that involve an Australian bush setting or tropical jungle, especially in older movies.
They have a cat-like mewing call; sometimes likened to the cry of a human baby.
The bell miner (Manorina melanophrys), commonly known as the bellbird, is a colonial honeyeater, endemic to southeastern Australia. The common name refers to their bell-like call. 'Miner' is an old alternative spelling of 'myna', and is shared with other members of the genus Manorina.