Sedge Wren
May
4th
This morning Mike and I went to Irwin
Prairie State Nature Preserve to look for a Sedge Wren which had been
reported. When we first arrived, we looked
around, listened, and even played a recording of the Sedge Wren singing but we got
no response. We walked all the way out
on the boardwalk and when we were returning, I heard the Sedge Wren
singing. I played the tape and he popped
up, so we were able to get great looks at him.
A Sedge Wren is a tiny, bubbly,
buffy-colored wren of damp grassy areas.
It is similar to a Marsh Wren but prefers damp weedy fields and meadows,
not cattail marshes. It is generally secretive
but perches up when singing. The male Sedge
Wren weaves multiple nests and the female chooses the one she likes, lines it
with softer material and lays her eggs. Overall,
its numbers seem to be gradually declining.
We then went to Maumee Bay State Park
but didn’t see anything special except a Sora that came out of the reeds and
was posing for us.
(1
new species, total 228)
Sedge
Wren
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