[fragments of voices and jingles broadcast over shortwave] [Cuban radio announcer] Radio Cuba, Havana, Cuba [American radio announcer] At the tone, three hours, fifty-three minutes, Coordinated Universal Time [interlocutor] What is the difference--the distinction--between a swish and a whistler? [engineer] Well, a swish descends through the audio frequency spectrum with time, whereas a whistler is more coherent [interlocutor] In other words, the whistler is a rarified and specialized case of the swish [engineer] Well, we find some which start out like a swish and end up like a whistler, and we call these "swishlers" [interlocutor] They're audio frequencies, but they're not audible unless you have radio ears [engineer] That's correct. They're audio frequency radio waves
[interlocutor] We've talked about whistlers a lot, now perhaps we should just devote no more than a minute or two to the tweek [engineer] The tweek is rather well understood. I demonstrate that these are indeed tweeks, but that the rate of decline in tone is so fast, that they're not recognizable as well-developed tweeks until you slow them down [interlocutor] A mature tweek is one that's many miles away [engineer] If it's a crash or a bonk, and if it's far enough away so that it's not that but not a tweek, it's one of these immature tweeks The dawn chorus, on the other hand, is not at all well understood, and there is no theory to explain it [warbling unidentifiable announcer]