© 2026. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Bird Song Apps: Harmful For Birds?

Binoculars, check. Snacks, check. Smartphone with bird song playback apps, check. I‘m ready to go birding! Maybe I‘ll even catch a peek at a Purple Finch. It‘s been elusive this year, but I‘m feeling lucky today.

But wait, should I use those apps? If you haven‘t heard about this before, some birders are trying to bypass luck; they‘re attracting elusive birds with playback apps that identify, record, and mimic the sounds and signals of thousands of species of birds.

Learning The Songs

Bird-song apps  were designed for field use, but mostly to help birders learn particular songs, not attract birds. Throughout the year, birds need to strike a balance between gathering resources and expending them while foraging or nesting.

Repeatedly or relentlessly playing decoy sounds of potential rivals or mates can distract territorial birds from those important duties and cause a lot of undue stress.

European Nightjars

This can keep birds from pressing matters, like feeding their young. That‘s alarming for endangered bird populations, one example being the European nightjar that suffered from major habitat loss in the 1980s.

The Dorset Wildlife Trust warns that repeated playback from bird apps can confuse nightjars and other birds in their busy breeding seasons and waste time better spent mating and nesting.

But some researchers say that excessive caution is premature and point out that there are more pressing threats that birds face, like habitat loss and invasive species. An easy rule of thumb is not to use playback apps in places where crowds of people go to watch birds, such as reserves.

In any case, if you‘re a birder, exercise discretion: use binoculars to get your best close-ups, and power down technology if it puts you between a bird and its duties.

Thank you to  Geoff Hill of Auburn University for reviewing this episode‘s script.

Sources And Further Reading: