• 跳转至目录
Macaulay Library Macaulay Library
搜索
未找到
未找到
菜单
关闭

Main navigation

  • 搜索
  • 资源
  • Dashboard
  • Merlin
  • 关于
  • 帮助

Secondary navigation

  • 捐赠
  • 登录

语言

  • Čeština
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español (América Latina)
  • Español (España)
  • Euskara
  • Français
  • עִברִית
  • Italiano
  • 日本語
  • Монгол
  • Norsk
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Русский
  • Türkçe
  • Українська
  • 中文 (繁體)
  • 中文(简体)

ML148347341

Winter Wren Troglodytes hiemalis

报告

作者

Anonymous 该用户提供的媒体文件

日期

31日 3月 2019年 eBird记录 S54409715

地点

Bosque Trails West of Valle de Oro NWR -- NMSLO
Bernalillo, New Mexico, United States
该地点产生的媒体文件 配图名录
地图
地图 坐标: 34.9713227, -106.686427
年龄
未说明
性别
未说明
回放
未说明

观察细节

Continuing bird along ditch about one mile south of Valle de Oro parking. Immediately adjacent to where the south most trail into the Bosque spurs off from the ditch. (34.9588807, -106.6811933). Originally reported as Pacific Wren but I suspect it is a Winter (though I’d be very happy to be wrong). The best way to tell these similar species apart is by their single or double noted calls and unfortunately, this bird wasn't giving that up. It was however, singing a somewhat subdued and abbreviated song, showing well, and twice gave a short alarm rattle. I don't know that I have enough experience to separate these species visually except in the most extreme cases, but this individual seemed closer to what I'd expect from a Winter Wren than a Pacific. The overall color was gray/brown and though there were some more rich tones in the upper parts and perhaps in the breast, it seemed overall cold and drab, particularly on the crown which was almost a flat gray color. Additionally there seemed to be extensive mottling and streaking on the sides of the face, neck, and breast that seem to point towards Winter Wren. I know there's supposed to be some differences in the tertial and primary patterns, but I couldn't sort that one out enough to say anything about it. The song, for what it's worth given that it wasn't a full song, sounded to me more musical than would be expected from Pacific, with fewer trills and rattles and more separate notes. I have heard a lot of Pacific Wrens but very few Winter Wrens singing and the songs are objectively very similar so I am no expert but my feeling was that the song supports Winter more than Pacific. Also, the bird was responsive to both Winter and Pacific Wren songs from Xeno-canto and Sibley app. (As was a nearby Bewick's Wren). I don't ever put much stock into how responsive a bird is to tape for this reason. The rattle call (heard only twice) was for me the most convincing argument for Winter Wren. The extremely rapid series of hard staccato notes given by this bird seem harder, lower, and much more wren-like then compared to the almost Wilson's Warbler-like calls of Pacific Wren. When given in a fast series like this it recalls a bubbly HOWR almost. In my experience, these rapid ratchet calls are less obviously diagnostic than the typical single or double call notes these species give but are different enough to tell apart. In summary, I really didn't observe anything that suggested to me this wasn't a Winter Wren. Everything I did see and hear supports that conclusion and given that Winter Wren is more regular here, I don't see any reason to suspect that it was a Pacific. Hopefully I'm wrong. :)

技术信息

录音机
话筒
附件
原始文件大小
80.82 KB

Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Collections and Guides

  • Cornell Guide to Bird Sounds: United States and Canada
  • Radio Expeditions
  • Internet Bird Collection
  • Oriental Bird Club Image Database

资源

  • 准备并上传媒体文件
  • 录音小提示
  • 使用并对媒体文件评分
  • 申请媒体文件
  • 目标鸟种
  • 照片+声音小测验
  • 音频编辑教程
  • 设置录音软件
  • 选择录音器材
  • 音频录制工作室
  • 学生机会

关于

  • 历史
  • 我们的团队
  • 联系我们
  • Land acknowledgement
  • 网络访问辅助
  • 隐私政策
  • 使用条件
捐赠

Follow us

Cornell University Cornell University
© 2025 Cornell University