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You sound as barking mad as me. I chat to them all afternoon. I also have a very simple call sign I give when I approach them, just like they do.I know many of our hens' vocalizations, too (and of course can tell the rooster crows apart).
Some are especially distinctive. Miss Eula makes a high-pitched, fingernails-on-chalkboard sound that doesn't match her big form. Bebe does a deep, "I'm planning your death" honk when she doesn't get her way.
I talk to the chickens as much as they talk to me, which is to say, a constant babble back and forth. I'm sure they know it's me by my voice but can't point to why.
Easier to prove that the roosters know bird voices, as they'll reply specifically to their hens and ignore calls from other groups.
Even when Andre's hens have flown over the fence and gone foraging on their own, 100' yards away and out of sight, when they bakaw in surprise at the greenhouse chipmunk, Andre immediately yells back from across the field while the other roosters ignore them.
Tax: coloratura soprano Eula and contralto Beebs.
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Of course they can recognise voices. I often think they're hearing is as important if not more so than their eyesight.
Include the infra bass sensors in their legs and they can pick up quite a range of frequencies. Each voice is different. They may even accents according to breed for all I know.
Both Henry and Fret know what I call them; Carbon I'm not so sure about.
Juveniles sometimes respond to "you hooligans."
