Japanese Birds 4+

Enwit Inc.

Designed for iPhone

    • 1.5 • 2 Ratings
    • $49.99

iPhone Screenshots

Description

This app provides information on 250 species of birds in Japan, complete with photographs, descriptions, and sounds. There are 364 sounds—including songs, calls, and drumming. Beautiful birdsong, passionate canzone, the melancholy melody of a love song, intense drumming, birdcall as daily communication—enjoy the diverse world of wild birds.

You can look up birds anytime, anywhere with this app installed on your iPhone/iPod touch. No more having to lug heavy guidebooks around.

When you encounter a bird, you can listen to its pleasing birdsong, then you can let this app work for you. You can browse by name alphabetically or by family, or search by common name, scientific name, or Japanese name.

Japanese name could be convenience when you talk to Japanese bird watcher. e.g. “Red-crowned Crane” is “Tan-cho” in Japanese name. It has also glossary and terminology in Japanese and English.

If you do not remember or cannot even guess at part of the bird's name, you can use the search function to search by color, size, habitat, or distribution. You can browse through the quickly returned search results, which are sorted by size. Color or habitat search conditions can be set as a filter as you wish.

To play a sound, simply tap on the sound play button or on the phonetic spelling text. Photographs, life descriptions, and phonetic spelling for voices help you to understand birds effortlessly.
In addition, you can let the link function work for you so you do not miss similar sounds.

You can make your own lists of favorite birds, by season, by site, or in any manner you like. Included are sample lists for Hokkaido(endemic to Hokkaido) and Okinawa(endemic to Okinawa).

The player function plays sounds from your own list or by family.

You can use it to simply appreciate your favorite sounds, or to train your ear using blind mode.

Text size for menus and descriptions can be set to small or large as you wish. This app is bilingual in Japanese and English, allowing you to enjoy international communication through wild birds.

The photographs are by Takuya Kanouchi, and the sound recordings and text are by Hideo Ueda. Between them, they have taken a massive number of photographs and recorded many, many sounds over several decades. Now this wealth of information is in your hands, and with this treasured library you can go out into the field of wild birds.

Some of the contents of this app were originally published as a book (see left picture). This app includes a glossary and terminology for parts of a bird taken from the book.

When you use this app to play sounds outdoors, please use headphones or turn the volume down if using a speaker. Your consideration in not disturbing other birdwatchers is appreciated.

******Update History*****
1.4.1
- Build for iOS 15
- Fixed bugs of display on some devices.

1.3.0
-Fixed corrupted layout in iOS7
-Fixed corrupted layout with using link from SmartBirding
-Revise stability of player with play list has large number of sounds.
-Fixed some bugs by improved memory management.

1.2.1
-Fixed wrong sort in alphabetic.
-Revise message about detecting of mute.
-Place name index has link to GoogleMap.

1.2.0
-Support screen size of iPhone 5 and iOS 6.
-This version is based on Check-list of Japanese Birds, 7th revised edition by The Ornithological Society of Japan
(Preference selects 6th edition or 7th.)
-Access to another species of same family in detail screen.
-Photos is positioned on horizontal scroll.
-Play by speaker mode over mute added. Default mode is not play by speaker if OS set to mute. In field play by speaker is sensitive to another bird watcher and wild birds.
-Link to Wikipedia
-Link to Smart Birding, movie app.
***************************

What’s New

Version 1.4.3

Bug fixed in Player mode.

Ratings and Reviews

1.5 out of 5
2 Ratings

2 Ratings

Peter Marsh ,

Dont buy this rubbish

This is the worst birding app I have ever come across (and I have lots!). There is typically only 1 illustration - poor in itself but sometimes showing breeding plumage when the bird only appears in Japan in winter. There are serious omissions - for instance the japanese endemic Copper Pheasant does not appear at all. the app is also very poor value when compared with very much better apps from other countries.

What bird is that? ,

Poor app

I was very disappointed in this app. Compared with the Australian bird apps it provided very limited information about the birds, limited photos (not showing male/female) and did not identify a lot of birds I saw e.g. Greater Scaup,Lesser Sand Plover.

It is very expensive too, compared with other apps

PostScript39 ,

A very useful bird spotters guide

Useful in the field and the inclusion of the Romaji Japanese names is invaluable. Unfortunately a few birds have been omitted from the otherwise comprehensive contents. The Finder tales a bit of practice to disentangle but works reasonably well.
The ability to download the lists would be a great addition to the program.

App Privacy

The developer, Enwit Inc., indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer's privacy policy.

Data Not Collected

The developer does not collect any data from this app.

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Supports

  • Family Sharing

    Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.

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