The ringtones on this website are in .mp3 format and is compatible with almost all mobile phones. Download ringtones and use them on Nokia Mobile phones, Samsung, Sony Ericsson phones, LG mobiles, Motorola phones etc...

For Android and other smartphones, you can shop directly from our website, from your mobile phone or from a computer or other device to buy and download our bird and animal call tracks. The link will take you to one of our nature sounds albums, and you can purchase the sound track you want from the list. We recommend getting a free app, like Ringtone Creator, which will do the work for you to create the ringtone, alert or alarm, and put it on your phone.


Download Bird Sounds Ringtone


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I hear this sound repeatedly every night around midnight (in southeast TX) along with various other chirps (usually three chirps of the same note followed by three either lower or higher). At first I thought someone was out late at night with their notifs turned up extremely loud, but there's no one out there when I look. Wasn't sure if the Twitter notif sound was a real bird or not because I couldn't find any info when looking it up. Is there a bird this sound comes from? Did someone's nocturnal parrot that likes the Twitter noise escape?

You love birdsong

Or to discover the songs of different birds

Or simply want to hear a certain sound mellow, relaxed

Bird sounds is the perfect app for you


Bird sound gives you:

* Large number of birds singing sound quality

* Number of bird species richness

* Free and easy to use

* A good night's sleep with the sound of birds chirping


Bird sounds to help you improve the joy of life, improve sleep.

BirdNote's theme music plays at the start of most episodes, and you can listen to it as often as you'd like by downloading it right here. And if you still can't get enough of BirdNote's theme music, you can set it as your ringtone!

Go to iTunes and download Birds in trees or Birds in Nature as a song. Then, when setting alarm, simply select that song which will play birds chirping sounds in the wild when the alarm sounds. Actually sounds even better than the Apple birds chirping option that was lost in the update.

The most common call is a two-parted, rising chewink, tow-hee, or joree, made by both sexes, often as an alarm call. This call can vary in tone geographically from clear whistles to hoarse or nasal sounds. Towhees make several other calls, including a high-pitched, quiet, lisping call for staying in contact, and a sharp tic when mobbing or fleeing predators.

Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones is a free app for Android published in the Audio File Players list of apps, part of Audio & Multimedia.


The company that develops Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones is msd developer multimedia. The latest version released by its developer is 2.0. This app was rated by 4 users of our site and has an average rating of 4.5.


To install Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones on your Android device, just click the green Continue To App button above to start the installation process. The app is listed on our website since 2017-11-27 and was downloaded 92 times. We have already checked if the download link is safe, however for your own protection we recommend that you scan the downloaded app with your antivirus. Your antivirus may detect the Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones as malware as malware if the download link to com.micawo.plover_sounds is broken.


How to install Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones on your Android device:Click on the Continue To App button on our website. This will redirect you to Google Play.Once the Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones is shown in the Google Play listing of your Android device, you can start its download and installation. Tap on the Install button located below the search bar and to the right of the app icon.A pop-up window with the permissions required by Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones will be shown. Click on Accept to continue the process.Plover Bird Sounds Ringtones will be downloaded onto your device, displaying a progress. Once the download completes, the installation will start and you'll get a notification after the installation is finished.

Nightingale Bird Sound Ringtones is a free Android app developed by BirdDev that allows users to set the beautiful and powerful songs of nightingales as their ringtones. The app is perfect for bird lovers who want to listen to the enchanting songs of the common nightingale, also known as rufous nightingale.

With this app, users can choose from a variety of nightingale songs and set them as their default ringtone, notification sound, or alarm tone. The app also allows users to share the nightingale songs with their friends and family.

The app is easy to use and has a simple interface. It is perfect for those who want to add a touch of nature to their daily lives. Overall, Nightingale Bird Sound Ringtones is a great app for bird enthusiasts who want to enjoy the melodious songs of the common nightingale.

The rareearthtones.org Web site features free ringtones of the howls, croaks, chirps, songs and calls, as well as photos of more than 50 rare and endangered animals from around the world. Ringtones and photos of the American pika and half a dozen endangered and rare North American birds were added today. The most popular ringtone sounds are the orca and Mexican gray wolf, with more than 10,000 downloads each so far.

The wildlife ringtones have been featured on ABC News, CNN, National Public Radio and in several dozen newspaper articles nationwide including Fox News, San Francisco Chronicle, Contra Costa Times, San Diego Union-Tribune, Stockton Record, Houston Chronicle and Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

Between one and four years later, eight of those bats were recaptured and exposed again to the food-related ringtone. All of them flew toward the sound, and six flew all the way to the speaker and grabbed the food reward, meaning they expected to find food. Control bats without previous training on the sounds were comparatively unmoved by the exposure to the unfamiliar tones.

Over time, the sound was mingled with and gradually replaced by a ringtone, but the reward was the same. Researchers then introduced three other ringtones, none of which was connected to a food reward. Bats were trained to discern the differences and eventually no longer flew toward the unrewarded sounds. Each bat secured at least 40 snacks by flying to the trained ringtone over 11 to 27 days. All bats were microchipped and returned to the wild.

Beginning a year later and for three additional years, Dixon captured bats and identified eight from the initial trial by their microchips. In a follow-up test of their response to the original rewarded ringtone, all eight trained bats quickly flew to the sound and were able to tell the difference between that ringtone and a new, steady tone, though many of the bats did fly to an unrewarded sound from the initial training.


If your song- or beep-based ringtone is starting to grate, perhaps it's time to download the "clickety-click-click of a rare Central American poison arrow dart frog," the "howl of a Mexican gray wolf" or the "bellows of an Arctic beluga whale" (descriptions from the Associated Press). Download links for each of those ringtones are below, but your phone will need to support MP3 ringtones in order for you to use them.

It was a nice evening. The wetland looked more green, plants were flourishing! The soft rushes grew taller and flowered. More horsetails were seen, and the red osier dogwoods and Pacific ninebark grew out and began to bloom. So much more area was occupied by these and other plants in the wetland. Surprisingly, many eastern cottontails, rabbits with brown bodies and white tails, ran around and fed on grasses. This was the first time I saw them at this site. Red-winged blackbirds, crows, and many other birds were active in the wetland. A small-sized killdeer was wandering around, the big killdeer I observed a couple of weeks ago might be its parent. I also heard a woodpecker pecking a tree, creating that construction sound.

The stream carried sand and gravel, and there could be clay near these streams (5). The stream provided a water source for plants and animals and a habitat for invertebrates and so on. It was more chilly near the water, keeping the temperature cooler and the ground wetter at the bottom of the hill, while it was drier at the top of the hill since it received more sunlight. Going higher up, I saw a few barred owls (6) resting quietly in chestnut trees with their eyes closed. They seemed to be more comfortable with humans than some other smaller birds which got scared away more easily. They had horizontal brown bars around the neck and vertical brown bars on the belly, and were barred brown and white overall. I also observed a squirrel (7) feeding on flowers from another chestnut tree, so fluffy and cute! There were some erratics (8) here and there, which were once deposited by glaciers.

I also got to take a great photo of a nurse log, which had new trees growing out of the fallen log (9). After I quietly stood still for 5-10 minutes, a bird came by and I recorded a video of it vocalizing. Overall it was a great trip.

What a sunny day! Again, the wetland did not look drastically different from last week in terms of the plants and the water level, other than that the trees seemed to be more leafy and green, but it could also be the weather (Fig. 1). The mallards were not here today. There were some ducks of unknown species described in Journal 2, resting on the water further away from the trail. Three were standing on a piece of wood. There were more crows hovering and making high-pitched and rapid bird calls. I was able to identify the sedges in the middle of Figure 2 to be Carex kelloggii with their dense tuft, brownish base, and conspicuous old leaves (Fig. 2). There were again the high-pitched, five notes in 2351a5e196

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