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"House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) 19 December 2015: In the course of completing the final Bird Walk of the year at the Clear Creek Natural Heritage Center (CCNHC) in Denton, Texas, we came upon this representative of the House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) on the Wetlands Trail (otherwise marked Duck Trail on the Google map that accompanies this observation). The House Wren is a permanent resident of large parts of the Western Hemisphere including South America, Central America, and all of southern Mexico. And it is a wintering resident in all of the remainder of Mexico and the entire southern half of the United States. It breeds in the northern half of the United States and the southernmost tier of Canada bordering with the US. Permanent range is also found in the northernmost areas of Baja California Norte in northwestern Mexico, especially along the Pacific Coast, and upwards on the coast in California through the Central Coast of the same in the US. Hereâs the short thumbnail sketch for House Wren in All About Birds: ""A plain brown bird with an effervescent voice, the House Wren is a common backyard bird over nearly the entire Western Hemisphere. Listen for its rush-and-jumble song in summer and youâll find this species zipping through shrubs and low tree branches, snatching at insects. House Wrens will gladly use nestboxes, or you may find their twig-filled nests in old cans, boots, or boxes lying around in your garage."" Because of its presence virtually everywhere in the Western Hemisphere, this omnipresent songbird is unequivocally an authentic resident of this area of planet Earth. The CCNHC is administered by the City of Denton, Texas. Source: ""House Wren,"" All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, photographs, range map, description, resource links, accessed 12.20.15, https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/House_Wren/id"
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"House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) 19 December 2015: In the course of completing the final Bird Walk of the year at the Clear Creek Natural Heritage Center (CCNHC) in Denton, Texas, we came upon this representative of the House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) on the Wetlands Trail (otherwise marked Duck Trail on the Google map that accompanies this observation). The House Wren is a permanent resident of large parts of the Western Hemisphere including South America, Central America, and all of southern Mexico. And it is a wintering resident in all of the remainder of Mexico and the entire southern half of the United States. It breeds in the northern half of the United States and the southernmost tier of Canada bordering with the US. Permanent range is also found in the northernmost areas of Baja California Norte in northwestern Mexico, especially along the Pacific Coast, and upwards on the coast in California through the Central Coast of the same in the US. Hereâs the short thumbnail sketch for House Wren in All About Birds: ""A plain brown bird with an effervescent voice, the House Wren is a common backyard bird over nearly the entire Western Hemisphere. Listen for its rush-and-jumble song in summer and youâll find this species zipping through shrubs and low tree branches, snatching at insects. House Wrens will gladly use nestboxes, or you may find their twig-filled nests in old cans, boots, or boxes lying around in your garage."" Because of its presence virtually everywhere in the Western Hemisphere, this omnipresent songbird is unequivocally an authentic resident of this area of planet Earth. The CCNHC is administered by the City of Denton, Texas. Source: ""House Wren,"" All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, photographs, range map, description, resource links, accessed 12.20.15, https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/House_Wren/id"
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From past files , a singing male .
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San Diego County, California, US
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San Diego County, California, US
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Breve descripción de lo que observaste
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Breve descripción de lo que observaste
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Breve descripción de lo que observaste
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