

Some like natural sounds like animal and bird sounds as their phone rings. Many of us like to have unique music phone ringtones so that when we get a call from our phone contacts we may amuse ourselves with the beautiful melodious music ringtones.
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I present a new free animal sounds Ringtones app with lots of interesting and popular all animals, Birds sound & Ringtones! Bring the jungle and the forests to life, all through the captivating sounds of your favorite animals and birds. The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 320,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.Animal Sounds Ringtones is a free app that lets you enjoy the sounds of over 100 animals, birds as your ringtones, notification sounds, or alarm tones.Experience the charm of the animal kingdom right on your smartphone with the "All Animal, Bird Sounds Ringtones" app! Immerse yourself in the mesmerizing world of nature's melodies. Tech Journal South: “The Center for Biological Diversity has discovered the power of reaching mobile content junkies with its message of saving endangered species.” Seattle Post-Intelligencer: “So geeky, it's gotta be cool. An unlikely pair? Not anymore.”Ĭurves magazine: “This assortment of natural sounds is in sharp contrast to the jarring jangle of most electronica and an educational reminder about the extinction crisis.”ĬBS-13, Sacramento: “Change the ringtone on your cell phone, and help change the world.” Wireless Week: “Wireless ringtones and social consciousness. The ringtones site is also available in Spanish.

#BIRDS RINGTONES DOWNLOAD#
The site also allows users to listen to wildlife ringtones, send them directly to their phones with a simple click and download cell phone wallpapers for each of the featured species. Some of the most popular downloads are the killer whale, gray wolf, beluga whale, barred owl, loon, bobcat and polar bear.Įach ringtone has its own spotlight page, including stats on each species’ habitat, range, population trends, threats and a few fun facts about its life in the wild. Since the Center began offering the free ringtones in December 2006, they’ve steadily gained worldwide appeal, downloaded by people in more than 150 countries, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Great Britain, India, Iran, Italy, Japan, Poland and the United States.

It’s a powerful tool that we hope sparks an interest in saving imperiled animals around the globe.”

“The ringtones become conversation-starters: Someone overhears one of the sounds and finds they’re suddenly talking with someone else about the plight of an endangered species. “Too often in this urban and digital age, we find ourselves separated from these amazing - and increasingly rare - animals that make the wild so rich,” Galvin said. To celebrate the milestone, the Center just added 17 new species from Hawaii, including the scarlet honeycreeper, Hawaiian monk seal and Hawaiian hawk. The calls have been downloaded about 515,000 times. “Whether it’s the howl of a Mexican gray wolf, the song of a beluga whale or the roar of a polar bear, these ringtones instantly connect people with wildlife, including species living at the edge of extinction,” Peter Galvin, the Center’s conservation director.Ĭalls from 113 species are available to download, including the jaguar, Pacific walrus, American pika, Florida panther, alligator, Gila monster, orca and more than 40 types of rare and endangered owls and birds. The Center for Biological Diversity’s free ringtones, featuring wildlife from around the world have been downloaded more than a half-million times, bringing the incredible growls, groans, hoots, chirps and trills of more than 100 species to cell phones across the planet. TUCSON, Ariz.- The call of the wild is being heard more often now than ever. To Mark Historic Milestone, New Hawaiian Species Added to Free Download Site Endangered Species Ringtones Downloaded More Than 500,000 Times
