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Big Bend National Park, TX
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Las Vegas, Nevada
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Pima Co., Arizona
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Pima Co., Arizona
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Pima Co., Arizona
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Cochise Co., Arizona
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McDowell Sonoran Preserve Toms Thumb Trailhead, Scottsdale, Phoenix Arizona, USA
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The state bird of Arizona is the Cactus Wren (Campylorhynchus brunneicapillus). This song is used extensively in movie sound tracks - you'll hear it when the scene calls for a remote desert location in the Western US. They are the largest US wren and make their home among the cacti, often nesting in a cavity in a Saguaro - they're archtypical Arizona bird! These two were recorded 30 miles North of Phoenix, Arizona, 1/17/99.
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San Jose Del Cabo - Estuary
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Yaviza Darien Gap Border post
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arizona-sonora desert museum, tucson, arizona
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Rurrenabaque, El Beni, Bolivia
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Subject: Live Animal | Type: Photo | Life Stages And Gender: Adult/Sexually Mature | Anatomy: Coloration/Patterning :: Cryptic
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McDowell Sonoran Preserve Toms Thumb Trailhead, Scottsdale, Phoenix Arizona, USA
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Here's another example of this call, just to show how three individuals sing the "same" song differently.
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Tepic - Cerro de San Juan
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Known as the Rufous-naped Wren or as Matraca Nuquirrufa, this perky member of the Troglodytidae Family may be found near the Pacific Ocean from here in southern Mexico to Costa Rica.
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Rurrenabaque, El Beni, Bolivia
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McDowell Sonoran Preserve Toms Thumb Trailhead, Scottsdale, Phoenix Arizona, USA
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Rufous-naped Wrens (Campylorhynchus rufinucha) are close relatives of the Band-backed Wren, and they sound similar. This sample demonstrates two of their calls - the first is a solitary bird, followed by some social interaction of a small flock of 8-10 birds. (Costa Rica)
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Tepic - Cerro de San Juan