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Sedge Wren Cistothorus platensis

       

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Sedge Wren, adult on branch
© Ron Austing

© Lang Elliot/Naturesound.com (audio)

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Family: Troglodytidae, Wrens view all from this family

Description 4-4 1/2" (10-11 cm). A tiny, secretive wren of grassy marshes. Buff-colored, with finely streaked crown and back. Best distinguished by voice and habitat.

Habitat Grassy freshwater marshes and sedges; also brackish marshes and wet meadows in winter.

Nesting 5-7 white eggs in a globular mass of marsh grass with a side entrance. The nest is lined with feathers and hair that has been woven into the top of a dense stand of grass or sedge.

Range Breeds from Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and New Brunswick south to Kansas, Missouri, and Delaware. Winters north to southern Illinois and Virginia. Very local.

Voice   A series of harsh notes, sounding like two pebbles tapping together; often heard at night.

Discussion The Sedge Wren is most often seen as it is flushed from grass and flies off, only to drop from view a few feet away. Its flight is distinctive, the wings vibrating stiffly as the bird seems to float over the ground. Like other wrens, it builds "dummy" nests, often hidden in dense marsh grass.

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