Skip to main content Skip to navigation
Home
Today's Show: Rhinoceros Hornbill
Rhinocerous Hornbill
Listen In
  • Today's Show
  • Listen
    • Daily Shows
    • Threatened
    • Grouse
    • BirdNote Presents
    • How to Listen
  • Explore
    • Field Notes
    • Sights & Sounds
    • Birdwatching
    • Resources for Educators
  • How to Help Birds
    • At Home
    • In Your Community
    • Success Stories
  • About
    • The BirdNote Story
    • The Team
    • Partners
    • For Radio Stations
    • Funding
    • Contact Us
    • FAQs
    • Support BirdNote
  • Donate

A Young Bewick's Wren Learns to Sing

Like father, like son? Not quite!
Subscribe to the Podcast
Download
  • Share This:
  • Share to Facebook
  • Share to Twitter
  • Share to Email
Bewick's Wren
© Joseph Blowers CC

Donald Kroodsma, avian communication expert, offers great research on the songs of the Bewick's Wren. At this time of year, a very young male Bewick's Wren is beginning to learn how to sing. His father sings a crisp well-defined song, separated by pauses, but the young bird's song is fuzzy, unfocused, a little rambling. Each adult male Bewick's Wren has his own set of unique songs. A young wren grows up learning his father's songs. But when young bird matures and moves to its own new territory, it will leave behind the song of its father to create a song that sounds more like its new neighbors. The better to compete for a mate!

Support for BirdNote comes from American Bird Conservancy, announcing Bringing Back the Birds, a new book exploring migration and preserving birdscapes in the Americas, with photos by Owen Deutsch.

  • Full Transcript
  • Credits

BirdNote®

A Bewick’s Wren Learns to Sing

By Chris Peterson

This is BirdNote!

[A young Bewick’s Wren learning to sing (1)]

At this time of year, a very young male Bewick’s Wren is beginning to learn how to sing. [Continue young Bewick’s Wren learning to sing (1)] Like a human baby, he’ll babble while he experiments with sounds and learns how to organize phrases.

[Babbling of a human baby (2)]

The young Bewick’s Wren is listening to the song of his father who sings a crisp well-defined song, separated by pauses.

[Song of adult Bewick’s Wren with three phrases (3)]

Now let’s compare:  Here’s the song of our young Bewick’s Wren: [Song of young male Bewick’s Wren]

It’s fuzzy, unfocused, a little rambling.

Here’s the adult male again: [Song of adult Bewick’s Wren]

It’s fully developed and unique to that male.

Each adult male Bewick’s Wren has his own set of songs.  [Song of adult Bewick’s Wren] A young wren grows up learning his father’s songs.  But when it matures and moves to its own new territory, it will leave behind the song of its father to create a song that sounds more like its new neighbors.

[Song of different adult male Bewick’s Wren]

BirdNote would like to thank Donald Kroodsma, avian communication expert, for his research on the Bewick’s Wren. You’ll find a link to his work at birdnote.org.

Support for BirdNote comes from American Bird Conservancy, announcing Bringing Back the Birds, a new book exploring migration and preserving birdscapes in the Americas, with photos by Owen Deutsch.

###
Song of Bewick’s Wren and human baby (his daughter) recorded by Donald Kroodsma and found on the CD of Donald Kroodsma’s, The Singing Life of Birds: the Art and Science of Listening to Birdsong, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 2005  1) Track 11,  2) Track 9, and 3) Track 10.
Final song of adult Bewick’s Wren (103223) provided by Macaulay Library at Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, recorded by M.D. Medler.
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
© 2012 Tune In to Nature.org     May 2017/2019  Narrator: Mary McCann

ID#     BEWR-02-2012-05-01    
 

Chris Peterson
Writer
Mary McCann
Narrator
Support More Shows Like This

Related Resources

Bewick's Wren - More at All About BirdsMore about the language of birdsongSee Donald Kroodsma's book, "The Singing Life of Birds"

More About These Birds

Bewick's Wren (Thryomanes bewickii)

Thryomanes bewickii

Sights & Sounds

Birds connect us with the joy and wonder of nature. By telling vivid, sound-rich stories about birds and the challenges they face, BirdNote inspires listeners to care about the natural world – and take steps to protect it.

Support BirdNote

  • Daily Shows
  • Field Notes
  • BirdNote Presents
  • Sights & Sounds
  • About BirdNote
  • Contact BirdNote
Sign up for our newsletter!
  • BirdNote on Facebook
  • BirdNote on Twitter
  • BirdNote on Instagram

Copyright 2020. All rights reserved.

  • Privacy Policy