Wren - Bird Song

, 16 April 2020
Wren - Bird Song
Wren © Derek Middleton

By James Duncan

Learning and Engagement Officer

In this series of blogs I'm going to be exploring the wonderful world of bird song (with calls thrown in for good measure!) There's surely little more calming to human ears than the annual serenade of spring song. Each day, prior to the sun's appearance above the horizon, birds begin to advertise their presence, demonstrating their strength and ability in song. This serves not only to attract a mate but also to deter rivals. As you wake in the morning, during these times of increased isolation, take a moment to notice the birds who break the morning silence, the Robin, the Blackbird and perhaps the Song Thrush. Enjoy the chorus as it widens, as Wren, Starling, Chaffinch and Dunnock join in. The complexities of bird song may not be easy to get to grips with, but why not take the time to learn. The satisfaction to be gained from identifying birds by song (and calls) really can't be overemphasised - it's truly a window into another world. 


3# Wren (Troglodytes troglodytes)

Next up, the Wren, a species of contrast. On the one hand it's a tiny little bird, only a fraction larger than the Goldcrest, it's minute size matched by the simplicity of its name. On the other hand it packs a voice with huge punch and boasts a UK population large enough to make it our most numerous breeding bird. You may not always be aware of its presence, but familiarise yourself with its song and its abundance becomes clear. In fact, it's likely the Wren's lifestyle that disguises the true range of its population - though they will sometimes roost communally to keep warm (essential to protect against high winter mortality) it's a highly territorial species that largely lives a sheltered and solitary life. The Wren of course can be found all over the country in all manner of terrain. We may consider them to be birds of landscape-scale habitats, such as woodland, but ultimately this isn't truly correct. The Wren is really a master of the subterranean. It can be found where there are cracks and crevices, fallen branches and bushes, rocks and boulders, banks and walls, cliffs and wasteland. In fact, wherever you go, with the exception of the highest mountains, the Wren can be found. Its scientific name of troglodytes is even indicative of its habits, referring to the bird as a 'cave dweller.' It has conquered such a variety of environments that it's now known we have not just one UK species, but six subspecies. Four of these are distinct island specialities - the Shetland, Outer Hebrides, St Kilda and Fair Isle Wrens. Of course the Wrens aren't restricted to the UK - they're a hugely successful family of nineteen genera, with many species that occupy almost every part of the globe. It's fair to say the Eurasian Wren is certainly loved by us as we voted it our fourth favourite bird in the same national poll that gave the Robin top billing. 

Whilst the Robin sings for the majority of the year, the Wren perhaps trumps it for it rarely having a day off. It's truly an all round singer and its song is the one most likely to be heard on any given day. The Wren seems to sing with real soul and gusto, remarkably consistent with its personality of fizzing intensity. It moves rapidly, endlessly alert, almost mouse like, whilst the furious flurry of its tiny little wings seems to resemble a buzzing insect more than any bird species. The territorial nature of the Wren tends to result in cascades of song emerging from undergrowth, as rivals attempt to out-compete each other with the intensity and volume of sound. The one feature that is perhaps most noticeable about their song is indeed the sheer power for their size. There is no other UK bird species of such diminutive stature that utters such a jubilant repertoire.

Listen to the song in this video below -

The song may be repeated a number of times per minute, usually lasts between five to seven seconds and comprises a series of high-pitched, ringing, metallic notes interspersed with little 'trills' that sound somewhat like a soft 'machine-gun.' These trills tend to be predominantly within the second half of each verse. It has an 'explosive' nature to its delivery as there's no lead-in or out. Whilst wrens will often sing from cover to avoid detection, it's not unusual to see them perched, singing loudly and proudly from a prominent position. Interestingly, studies from both the Universities of Costa Rica and Salamanca have shown that environmental sounds in urban areas have increased the complexity of Wren vocalisations. It seems that some urban birds now sing longer notes, faster trills and at higher frequencies. It's possible that this could perhaps be a response to either increased background noise or higher population densities in such habitats. It should also be noted that many birds develop their songs from what they hear around them, and changes in complexity may also arise from the vastly more diverse and wide-ranging soundscape in our towns and cities. 

The song may well seem at odds with the size of the bird, but the reason the Wren is able to produce quite such a serenade is due to its physiology. In fact, the physiology of all birds. They're able to produce the most complex vocalisations in the animal kingdom owing to the syrinx, the bird's voice-box. The syrinx is located at the other end of the windpipe from the human larynx and is dual chambered. Put simply, unlike us, birds do not sing only when exhaling, allowing them an ability to produce contrasting notes almost simultaneously. 

Wrens also exhibit a couple of commonly heard calls. The first is a punchy, rattling "tik-tik" that can be uttered either individually or strung into a succession of rapidly repeated notes.  They're not unlike Robin calls, though they're longer, lack the 'elasticity' and have a much more squeaky quality. The series of notes tends to become more pronounced and vigorous should the Wren become more agitated.

Listen to this call below -

The call may often be interspersed with another, the more common alarm call, given typically in response to predators. This trill is somewhat more subdued and can be replicated by producing a 'rrrr-rolled R,' produced by blowing air over your tongue. Owing to the type of sound it's often a little harder to locate the direction of its delivery, another aid to avoiding detection by predators. It can be transliterated as "zrrrrr."

Listen to this call below -

  


Leave a comment

Comments

  • Lindsey COOKE:

    Informative and think I definitely have heard in my garden and seen at the back on telegraph wires.

    03 Jun 2020 06:31:00

  • Annemarie Wharton:

    Thank you for this astonishingly good description. I have struggled to convey the power and complexity of a tiny Wren singing but you have succeeded brilliantly. It will increase my enjoyment. 🙏🏻🙂

    06 Jun 2021 08:48:00

  • Wrenley girl:

    I like the description of the bird singing as a machine-gun.

    08 Jun 2022 19:27:00

  • Jennie Hill:

    Please can I sign up for the daily bird song identification emails, thank you Jennie

    02 May 2023 18:39:00

  • Sussex Wildlife Trust:

    Hi Jennie. You sign yourself up for it by following this link. Thanks

    https://courses.sussexwildlife...

  • Michael Potter:

    Hello, thank you for info about the wren.
    Can I please pick your brains? Today I was in semi-urban coniferous wood. I came across a group of about 5-6 small brown birds.

    Because of way they occasionally moved up and down the bark of trees I wondered if it was a tree creeper but now realise it wasn’t.

    Although most of the birds darted around in bushes and on to branches silently one of them went from tree to tree doing a loud “clicking” sound. However this was single clicks about 2 seconds apart so not like the ones above.

    Could this still be a wren do you think. And if not any ideas what it indeed was? Thanks for your time.

    21 Jul 2023 10:33:00

  • Conchita:

    Thanks, very helpful

    05 Jun 2024 16:56:00

Time Δ Debug Message - Perch Runway 3.2
1783228784.16980 [906] SELECT p.pagePath, pr.routePattern, pr.routeRegExp, p.pageTemplate, pr.routeOrder, s.settingValue AS siteOffline FROM swt_pages_staging p LEFT JOIN swt_page_routes pr ON p.pageID=pr.pageID LEFT JOIN swt_settings s ON s.settingID='siteOffline' UNION SELECT NULL AS pagePath, pr2.routePattern, pr2.routeRegExp, pr2.templatePath AS pageTemplate, pr2.routeOrder, NULL AS siteOffline FROM swt_page_routes pr2 WHERE templateID!=0 ORDER BY routeOrder ASC, pagePath ASC
1783228784.19670.0269Matched route: news/[slug:s]
1783228784.19680.0002Server address: 216.73.217.63
1783228784.19690Using master page: /templates/pages/blog/post.php
1783228784.19690Page arguments:
Array
(
    [0] => /news/wren-bird-song
    [s] => wren-bird-song
    [1] => wren-bird-song
)
1783228784.19720.0003 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.19820.001 [86] SELECT DISTINCT settingID, settingValue FROM swt_settings WHERE userID=0
1783228784.20.0018 [1] SELECT locationID FROM swt_shop_tax_locations WHERE locationIsHome=1 LIMIT 1
1783228784.20050.0005INSERT INTO swt_shop_cart(memberID,locationID,currencyID,cartPricing,cartProperties) VALUES(NULL,'1',47,'standard','[]')
1783228784.20270.0022 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_shop_cart WHERE cartID=22639862
1783228784.20330.0006 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_shop_cart WHERE cartID=22639862
1783228784.20410.0008 [nil] SELECT * FROM swt_shop_sales WHERE saleFrom<='2026-07-05 05:19:00' AND saleTo>'2026-07-05 05:19:00' AND saleActive=1 AND saleDeleted IS NULL ORDER BY saleOrder ASC
1783228784.20540.0013 [1] SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS DISTINCT tbl.* FROM ( SELECT idx.itemID, main.*, idx2.indexValue as sortval FROM swt_blog_index idx JOIN swt_blog_posts main ON idx.itemID=main.postID AND idx.itemKey='postID' JOIN swt_blog_index idx2 ON idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemKey='postID' AND idx2.indexKey='_id' WHERE 1=1 AND ((idx.indexKey='postSlug' AND idx.indexValue='wren-bird-song')) AND idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemKey=idx2.itemKey GROUP BY idx.itemID, idx2.indexValue, postID ) as tbl WHERE (postStatus='Published' AND postDateTime<='2026-07-05 05:19:00' ) GROUP BY itemID, sortval ORDER BY sortval ASC LIMIT 0, 10
1783228784.20790.0025 [1] SELECT FOUND_ROWS() AS `count`
1783228784.20870.0007 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_posts WHERE postID=2073 AND postStatus='Published' AND postDateTime<='2026-07-05 05:19:00'
1783228784.20970.001 [13] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_sections ORDER BY sectionTitle ASC
1783228784.21040.0008 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_blogs ORDER BY blogTitle ASC
1783228784.2110.0006 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_categories WHERE catID=191 LIMIT 1
1783228784.21170.0006 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_categories WHERE catID=206 LIMIT 1
1783228784.21230.0006Using template: /templates/blog/post.html
1783228784.21250.0002 [162] SELECT catID, catPath FROM swt_categories
1783228784.21350.001 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_posts WHERE postStatus='Published' AND postDateTime<='2026-07-05 05:19:00' AND postSlug='wren-bird-song'
1783228784.23460.0211Using template: /templates/blog/post.html
1783228784.23510.0005 [250] SELECT country, countryID FROM swt_shop_countries WHERE countryActive=1 ORDER BY country ASC
1783228784.23670.0015Using template: /templates/pages/attributes/seo.html
1783228784.23690.0002 [1] SELECT regionID, regionTemplate, regionPage, regionRev AS rev FROM swt_content_regions WHERE regionKey='Banner image' AND (regionPage='/news/post' OR regionPage='*')
1783228784.23770.0009 [nil] SELECT * FROM ( SELECT idx.itemID, c.regionID, idx.pageID, c.itemJSON, idx2.indexValue as sortval FROM swt_content_index idx JOIN swt_content_items c ON idx.itemID=c.itemID AND idx.itemRev=c.itemRev AND idx.regionID=c.regionID JOIN swt_content_index idx2 ON idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemRev=idx2.itemRev AND idx2.indexKey='_order' WHERE ((idx.regionID=104 AND idx.itemRev=0)) AND idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemRev=idx2.itemRev ) as tbl GROUP BY itemID, pageID, itemJSON, sortval, regionID ORDER BY sortval ASC
1783228784.23880.001 [82] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageNew=0 AND pageHidden=0 AND pageDepth >=0 AND pageDepth<=2 ORDER BY pageTreePosition ASC
1783228784.24170.0029 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.24220.0005 [2] SELECT pageID FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition DESC
1783228784.24420.002Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template.html
1783228784.24420 [6] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.24480.0006 [4] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.2450.0002 [29] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.24670.0016 [10] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.24760.0009 [7] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.2480.0004 [9] Using template: /templates/navigation/ps_nav_template_children.html
1783228784.24970.0018 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' OR pageSortPath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.25050.0008 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageHidden=0 AND pageNew=0 AND pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition
1783228784.25260.0021 [1] Using template: /templates/navigation/breadcrumbs.html
1783228784.2530.0004Using template: /templates/blog/post.html
1783228784.25350.0005 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_authors WHERE authorID='1' LIMIT 1
1783228784.25420.0007Using template: /templates/blog/author.html
1783228784.25450.0004 [1] SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS DISTINCT tbl.* FROM ( SELECT idx.itemID, main.*, idx2.indexValue as sortval FROM swt_blog_index idx JOIN swt_blog_posts main ON idx.itemID=main.postID AND idx.itemKey='postID' JOIN swt_blog_index idx2 ON idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemKey='postID' AND idx2.indexKey='_id' WHERE 1=1 AND ((idx.indexKey='postSlug' AND idx.indexValue='wren-bird-song')) AND idx.itemID=idx2.itemID AND idx.itemKey=idx2.itemKey GROUP BY idx.itemID, idx2.indexValue, postID ) as tbl WHERE (postStatus='Published' AND postDateTime<='2026-07-05 05:19:00' ) GROUP BY itemID, sortval ORDER BY sortval ASC LIMIT 0, 1
1783228784.25640.0019 [1] SELECT FOUND_ROWS() AS `count`
1783228784.25680.0004 [1] Using template: /templates/blog/post.html
1783228784.25960.0028Using template: /templates/blog/comment_form.html
1783228784.26030.0006 [6] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_comments WHERE 1=1 AND postID=2073 AND commentStatus='LIVE' ORDER BY FIELD(webmentionType, 'like', 'repost', 'comment', NULL) ASC, commentDateTime ASC
1783228784.30890.0486 [6] Using template: /templates/blog/comment.html
1783228784.31020.0013Using template: /templates/blog/post.html
1783228784.31030.0001 [1] SELECT * FROM swt_blog_authors WHERE authorID='1' LIMIT 1
1783228784.31120.0009 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/what-we-do' OR pageSortPath='/what-we-do' LIMIT 1
1783228784.31180.0006 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition='000-002' LIMIT 1
1783228784.31230.0005 [7] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageNew=0 AND pageHidden=0 AND pageTreePosition LIKE '000-002%' AND pageDepth >=1 AND pageDepth<=2 ORDER BY pageTreePosition ASC
1783228784.31440.0021 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.3150.0005 [2] SELECT pageID FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition DESC
1783228784.31670.0017 [6] Using template: /templates/navigation/footer-nav.html
1783228784.31720.0005 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/make-a-difference' OR pageSortPath='/make-a-difference' LIMIT 1
1783228784.31770.0004 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition='000-005' LIMIT 1
1783228784.31810.0004 [38] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageNew=0 AND pageHidden=0 AND pageTreePosition LIKE '000-005%' ORDER BY pageTreePosition ASC
1783228784.32030.0022 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.32080.0006 [2] SELECT pageID FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition DESC
1783228784.32270.0019 [10] Using template: /templates/navigation/footer-nav.html
1783228784.32550.0028 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/visit' OR pageSortPath='/visit' LIMIT 1
1783228784.3260.0005 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition='000-004' LIMIT 1
1783228784.32640.0004 [30] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageNew=0 AND pageHidden=0 AND pageTreePosition LIKE '000-004%' AND pageDepth >=1 AND pageDepth<=2 ORDER BY pageTreePosition ASC
1783228784.32840.002 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.32890.0005 [2] SELECT pageID FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition DESC
1783228784.33070.0018 [29] Using template: /templates/navigation/footer-nav.html
1783228784.33260.002 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/make-a-difference' OR pageSortPath='/make-a-difference' LIMIT 1
1783228784.33330.0007 [1] SELECT pageID, pageParentID, pageDepth, pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition='000-005' LIMIT 1
1783228784.33390.0006 [11] SELECT * FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageNew=0 AND pageHidden=0 AND pageTreePosition LIKE '000-005%' AND pageDepth >=1 AND pageDepth<=2 ORDER BY pageTreePosition ASC
1783228784.33590.002 [1] SELECT pageTreePosition FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pagePath='/news/post' LIMIT 1
1783228784.33650.0006 [2] SELECT pageID FROM swt_pages_staging WHERE pageTreePosition IN ('000-006-001', '000-006', '000') ORDER BY pageTreePosition DESC
1783228784.33890.0024 [10] Using template: /templates/navigation/footer-nav.html
1783228784.340.0011Request time: 0.1728
1783228784.340Process time: 0.1726
1783228784.340Memory: 1.653