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Distinctive and charismatic little bird with a bright orangey face and breast (easily hidden when facing away). Juvenile is very different, with bold pale buffy spotting on the back and breast. Found in a wide range of wooded habitats, including forests, gardens, hedges in farmland, and heathland, usually fairly near cover. Hops perkily on the ground, pausing to look around, often flicking its ...
Beautiful little finch with a sharp pink bill, cherry-red face, and brilliant black-and-yellow flashes in the wings. Juvenile (seen in late summer and autumn) has a plain head but is told easily by bold wing pattern. Uses a wide array of wooded and open habitats, from forests and gardens to steppe grasslands and meadows; often feeds on seeding thistles. Forms flocks in autumn and winter ...
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This map depicts the cumulative change in estimated relative abundance from {0} through {1} with circles representing 27km x 27km regions. Red indicates decline and blue indicates increase. The darker the color, the stronger the trend. White circles represent locations where the trend estimate is not significantly different from zero (i.e., the 80% confidence interval contains zero). Circle ...
European Robin Erithacus rubecula. Range: Non-breeding. The range map depicts the boundary of the species’s range, defined as the areas where the species is estimated to occur within at least one week within each season. Learn more Learn more about this data. Occurrence.
Relative abundance is depicted for each season along a color gradient from a light color indicating lower relative abundance to a dark color indicating a higher relative abundance. Relative abundance is the estimated average count of individuals detected by an eBirder during a 1 hour, 2 kilometer traveling checklist at the optimal time of day for each species.
Male greenish overall with a rather stout pale pinkish bill, yellow flashes on wing and sides of tail. Female is much drabber, but shares male pattern; especially note the big, dull pinkish bill and yellow wing flash. Inhabits varied wooded and forested habitats, including parks, gardens, and farmland with hedges and scattered trees. Forms flocks in autumn and winter, sometimes moving in more ...
Most people think of robins and immediately recall the familiar European Robin (Erithacus rubecula), ubiquitous in gardens, Christmas cards and fairy-tales alike. North Americans are proud to have ‘their own’ robin species, the larger American Robin (Turdus migratorius).
European Robin (Mar 16, 2024) 96. Keith Blackhall 3 12 7.55% Eurasian Nuthatch (Mar 4, 2024) 97. Mark Easterbrook 1 11 6.92% ...
Beautiful little forest robin. There are white “stars” in front of the eye and on the bottom of the throat, which are usually hidden. Most subspecies have a black-and-yellow tail in which the black forms a bold “T”.