It looks like nothing was found at this location. Maybe try one of the links below or a search?

iPhone Ringtones See all

For iPhone ringtones, shop our catalog from your iPhone or iPad as we link directly to the tone in iTunes.  Pre-formatted iPhone ringtones are only available for purchase through iTunes and while using your iPhone.  If viewing from a computer, choose the ringtones you want, then visit our site from your iPhone to buy and download. Our iPhone Ringtones are pre-formatted to automatically appear in your iPhone’s “Sounds” folder to be assigned as ringtones, alerts or alarms.

iPhone
Chipping Sparrow Bird Call iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes
iPhone
Acorn Woodpecker Bird Call iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes
This social woodpecker with a red head and white face is found in the northwest and southwest US and into Mexico. Their complex life in large groups is not the only thing that makes them different from other woodpeckers. Acorn Woodpeckers are known for caching huge numbers of acorns in holes they drill into trees. They typically choose one large tree which becomes their larder and is known as the “granary” where they will store tens of thousands of acorns. But their preferred food is insects. They live in family groups in which the juveniles stay for several years. Their populations have been stable, but the loss of oak forests and domestic herd overgrazing in their territories, combined with competition with aggressive non-native European Starlings are affecting their ability to maintain their numbers.  
iPhone
Bull Elk Bugle iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes
This big male elk is bugling for his harem. During the rut cows and calves stay together in a group with one or two males. Once roaming all across North America, today they live in 25 US states and 7 Canadian territories. This ringtone is a great example of a bull elk bugle.
iPhone
Common Redpoll Bird Call iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes
Nearly every other winter, the Common Redpoll is a welcome winter visitor to backyard feeders. Shortages of seed crops in the northern forest cause massive flocks of redpolls to move south, invading bird feeders across the Northeast. The redpoll is a small-headed brown and white bird, with streaky sides, a red forehead, and black around a yellow bill. It’s easy to mistake a Redpoll for a similar-looking House Finch, but no other finch has black around the bill on the face. Often seen in groups, Redpolls can sometimes “take over” your bird feeders with flocks numbering more than a hundred individuals! You can attract Redpolls to your yard by offering fresh niger (thistle) seed in multiple finch feeders during the winter months.
iPhone
Pine Warbler Bird Call iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes
iPhone
Bull Elk Call iPhone Ringtone
$1.29
Buy in iTunes

Android Ringtones See all

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. 

Android
Harris’ Hawk
$0.99
Buy on Amazon
Android
Gray Catbird Bird Call and Song
$0.99
Buy on Amazon
Android
Wood Duck
$0.89
Buy on Amazon
One of the most beautiful, elegant and possibly one of the quirkiest ducks in North America is the Wood duck. With the male’s gorgeous colors, beautifully patterned feathers and green crest, he is a delight to behold. This duck, not surprisingly, loves the woods and truly make it his home. Wood ducks will nest in holes at a good height in trees and are the only ducks equipped with claws. They will also nest in nest boxes put up around the edges of wooded lakes. The males make a sort of whistling sound.
Android
Mallard Duck
$0.89
Buy on Amazon
The Mallard duck is found in freshwater lakes and streams all across North America. This male has the gorgeous green iridescent head for which Mallards are known. The females are much less flashy and their brown feathers blend in well as they incubate the eggs and care for their ducklings. This mallard duck quack ringtone makes a great message alert.
Android
Northern Harrier
$0.99
Buy on Amazon
Northern Harriers are like a cross between a hawk and an owl; they normally hunt during the day, but have the round facial disc of an owl. This not only gives them the appearance of an owl, but also enables them to hunt by sound! This has given them their unique hunting style. Northern Harriers are often seen gliding low over a grassy field. All of the sudden you’ll see one drop down when it hears a prey item, such as a mouse, rustling in the grass. Harriers are also seen “stooping”, or diving straight down at prey like a falcon or buteo, or chasing down prey like an accipiter. Harriers really can do it all!  Keep an eye out for a low-flying hawk with a flat, round face. They also have a white rump patch and a deep “V” shape to their wings when gliding. Adult males are pale gray, earning them the additional nickname of “gray ghost”.
Android
Sharp-shinned Hawk
$0.99
Buy on Amazon
Cooper's Hawks are members of the genus Accipiter, sharing that genus with two other forest-loving hawks, the Northern Goshawk and the Sharp-shinned Hawk. Cooper's Hawks get their name from naturalist William Cooper, one of the founders of the New York Academy of Science. Homeowners with bird feeders may notice that their feeders have become a birdy buffet, not just for the birds eating the birdseed, but for the birds that like to eat feeder birds! Cooper's Hawks have learned to hang out near bird feeders and pick off the little birds that like to eat bird seed. This is why it is important to place bird feeders near cover, such as a bush or hedge, so that the little birds have a place to escape and hide from this quick and agile predator.