sp Full-range Bird Products!Green Tips & Products
Pet Bird Web | Breeder's Web | Birding / Wildlife Web | Home & Health Avianweb: Contact / Home

Resources

The Impact of Plastic Waste on our Oceans

Bird Species

Sedge Wrens

Wrens

Sedge Wren


Sedge Wrens The Sedge Wren (Cistothorus platensis) is a small songbird of the Wren family.


Description:

Adults have brown upperparts with a light brown belly and flanks and a white throat and breast. The back has pale streaks. They have a dark cap with pale streaks, a faint line over the eye and a short thin bill.

Identification Tips:

  • Length: 3.75 inches
  • Short, thin bill
  • Indistinct supercilium (line above eye)
  • Brown upperparts with pale streaks on back and crown
  • Buffy breast and flanks
  • Wings and tail barred with black
  • Short tail frequently held upright
  • Sexes similar
  • Found in wet fields and marshes
  • Similar species: Other wrens with indistinct superciliums (eye brows) are House, Winter and Rock Wrens. Winter Wren is more reddish-brown above, darker below and has a shorter tail. House Wren lacks white streaking on the crown and back and is less buffy on the underparts. Rock Wren is larger with a contrast between the gray back and brown rump and has buffy tips to the tail.
Sedge Wren

Distribution

Their breeding habitat is wet meadows and marsh edges in eastern North America and central Canada. These birds migrate to coastal areas in the southeastern United States. This bird's numbers are declining, possibly due to loss of habitat.


Nesting

The nest is a round lump attached to low vegetation, entered from the side; it is usually well-hidden. The male often builds several unused nests in his territory; he may puncture the eggs of other birds nesting nearby.


Diet

These birds forage low in vegetation, sometimes flying up to catch insects in flight. They mainly eat insects, also spiders.


Call / Song

The male's song is a rattling trill.


Sedge WrenCopyright: Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.org.and USGS; Length and wingspan from: Robbins, C.S., Bruun, B., Zim, H.S., (1966). Birds of North America. New York: Western Publishing Company, Inc.)




Photo, Video and/or Article contributions are welcome! Please click here for info

The Avianweb strives to maintain accurate and up-to-date information; however, mistakes do happen. If you would like to correct or update any of the information, please send us an e-mail. THANK YOU!

Bird Watching Products


Cameras: The Latest Styles at Great Prices!

Bird Houses / Nesting Boxes: From Build-Your-Own to Collectibles and Practical Easy-Care Nest Boxes

Books and Movies for Kids


Electronics

Environmentally safe, non-toxic products for your home:



Home | © Copyright 2006 AvianWeb LLC - Disclaimers | For questions or comments, please contact Website Administrator: Sibylle Faye

All content posted on this site is commentary or opinion and is protected under Free Speech. The information on this site is provided for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice of any kind. The Avianweb assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. Your use of this website indicates your agreement to these terms and those published here. All trademarks, registered trademarks and servicemarks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.