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  • Grasses and reeds grow at the edge of the water in Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington. The 23-acre saltwater marsh is home to more than 200 species of birds each year and is one of the last remaining saltwater estuaries in the greater Seattle area.
    EdmondsMarsh_Reeds_1898.jpg
  • A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) hides and rests in the reeds of the Edmonds Marsh in Edmonds, Washington, as four Canada geese swim by.
    Heron_GreatBlue_EdmondsMarsh_Resting...jpg
  • A pair of great blue herons (Ardea herodias) preen among the reeds in the Edmonds Marsh in Edmonds, Washington.
    Heron_GreatBlue_EdmondsMarsh_PairPre...jpg
  • A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) pokes its heads out of the reeds along the water in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington.
    Heron_GreatBlue_EdmondsMarsh_Reeds_1...jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) collects material for a nest it's building in the wetlands near Swan Lake, Victoria, Canada. Marsh wrens build nests that are suspended above the ground, attached to reeds. The male sometimes builds several nests, using the decoys to confuse predators.
    MarshWren_Nesting_Victoria_7595.jpg
  • The golden light of the setting sun shines on the cattails and reeds that line the frozen McGinnis Slough in the Orland Grove Forest in Orland Park, Illinois.
    IL_McGinnis-Slough_Frozen_Orland-Par...jpg
  • In the blue light of dusk, bulrush and marsh grasses seem to form horizontal layers in this view of the Edmonds Marsh in Edmonds, Washington.
    WA_Edmonds-Marsh_Dusk_Layers_0015.jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch among cattails in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington. Marsh wrens are song birds that have very large repertoires. Scientists found one western marsh wren that sang 219 different songs. Western marsh wrens know more songs than eastern birds. Eastern males know about 50 songs on average; western varities know about 150.
    Wren-Marsh_Singing_Edmonds-Marsh_931...jpg
  • A pair of Canada geese (Branta canadensis) swim in a channel in Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington.
    Geese_Canada_Swimming_EdmondsMarsh_2...jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch among cattails in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington. Marsh wrens are song birds that have very large repertoires. Scientists found one western marsh wren that sang 219 different songs. Western marsh wrens know more songs than eastern birds. Eastern males know about 50 songs on average; western varities know about 150.
    Wren-Marsh_Singing_Edmonds-Marsh_919...jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch among cattails in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington. Marsh wrens are song birds that have very large repertoires. Scientists found one western marsh wren that sang 219 different songs. Western marsh wrens know more songs than eastern birds. Eastern males know about 50 songs on average; western varities know about 150.
    Wren-Marsh_Singing_Edmonds-Marsh_933...jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch among cattails in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington. Marsh wrens are song birds that have very large repertoires. Scientists found one western marsh wren that sang 219 different songs. Western marsh wrens know more songs than eastern birds. Eastern males know about 50 songs on average; western varities know about 150.
    Wren-Marsh_Singing_Edmonds-Marsh_922...jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch on a cattail near Swan Lake, Victoria, Canada. Marsh wrens are song birds that have very large repertoires. Scientists found one western marsh wren that sang 219 different songs. Western marsh wrens know more songs than eastern birds. Eastern males know about 50 songs on average; western varities know about 150.
    MarshWren_Singing_Victoria_7628.jpg
  • A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) rests in the tall marsh grasses in the Edmonds Marsh, Edmonds, Washington.
    Heron_GreatBlue_EdmondsMarsh_Golden_...jpg
  • An American bittern (Botaurus lentiginosus) stands motionless while hunting at the edge of Levee Pond in Fife, Washington. American bitterns are medium-sized herons that attempt to blend in with their surroundings as they hunt for fish, frogs and insects. They are most commonly found at the end of freshwater marshes where they can hide in reeds and other vegetation.
    Bittern_American_Hunting_Levee-Pond_...jpg
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