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Hobro, Jylland, Danmark
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Another example of the song and call notes
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Pantanal
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Santiago de Atitlan
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McDowell Sonoran Preserve Toms Thumb Trailhead, Scottsdale, Phoenix Arizona, USA
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Hobro, Jylland, Danmark
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Another "song" in which they use their normal call notes to approximate a song.
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Santa Elena - Hidden Valley
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Pyramid Lake
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McDowell Sonoran Preserve Toms Thumb Trailhead, Scottsdale, Phoenix Arizona, USA
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Randers Fjord
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Black Canyon Springs, in the high desert south of Cottonwood, Arizona.
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Buenaventura
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Machu Picchu
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Midtsjælland, Denmark
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This is their alert voice which they use when they're being bothered by a wierdo who is pointing that black tube at them.
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Rancho Frio
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Point Reyes National Seashore
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A second example of the Canyon Wren's trill - a slightly different tune, but just as beautiful!
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Corcovado National Park - La Sirena
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Point Reyes National Seashore
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This Marsh Wren (Cistothorus palustris) talks up a storm as he forages through the weeds at the South edge of Peck's Lake [Arizona]. I walked along side him for twenty minutes, and he never stopped talking! He was joined later by two others in his family. This sample is large, but it's still only 17 seconds from several minutes' vocalization.
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Mount Davidson
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A Gray-breasted Wood Wren (Henicorhina leucophrys) is a delight to hear in the deep cloud forests of Monteverde and Santa Elena (Costa Rica). Listen to these and compare them to the Riverside Wren, who occupies the niche in the Pacific slope that this bird holds in the highlands.