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Birds of Northern Ireland: The Complete List

Northern Ireland’s mix of rugged coastline, loughs, wetlands and uplands supports a wide range of birdlife. Whether you’re scanning estuaries, walking woodland trails or visiting hides, the variety of habitats makes birding rewarding year‑round.

There are 106 Birds of Northern Ireland, ranging from Avocet to Wren. For each species, the list gives Scientific name,Status,Where found so you can check taxonomy, conservation status and typical locations — you’ll find below.

How was this list compiled?

The list is based on national and local bird records, county reports and established checklists, with statuses reflecting recent assessments; sightings from recorder groups and conservation bodies were used to confirm the current 106 species.

When and where should I go to see many species, including Avocet or Wren?

Coastal estuaries and loughs (for example, Strangford Lough) are prime for Avocet during migration and breeding seasons, while Wren is common year‑round in woodlands and gardens; check tide times and recent local reports to target the best sites and times.

Birds of Northern Ireland

Name Scientific name Status Where found
Avocet Recurvirostra avosetta Scarce visitor and recent breeder Coastal lagoons, estuaries, especially Strangford Lough and Lough Foyle.
Barn Owl Tyto alba Resident Farmland, grassland, and woodland edges across NI.
Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica Winter visitor / Passage Estuaries and muddy coastlines, notably Strangford Lough.
Blackbird Turdus merula Resident Gardens, parks, woodland, and farmland across NI.
Blackcap Sylvia atricapilla Summer visitor and scarce winter resident Woodlands, parks, and large gardens with scrub.
Black Guillemot Cepphus grylle Resident seabird Coastal waters, harbours, and cliffs, especially Co. Antrim and Co. Down.
Black-headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus Resident, numbers boosted in winter Coasts, inland lakes, farmland, and urban parks.
Blue Tit Cyanistes caeruleus Resident Gardens, woodlands, and parks everywhere in NI.
Brambling Fringilla montifringilla Winter visitor Beech woodlands and farmland, often with Chaffinches.
Brent Goose Branta bernicla Winter visitor Coastal estuaries, especially Strangford Lough and Lough Foyle.
Bullfinch Pyrrhula pyrrhula Resident Woodlands, orchards, and large, well-vegetated gardens.
Buzzard Buteo buteo Resident Widespread over farmland, woodland, and moorland.
Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs Resident Ubiquitous in gardens, woodlands, and farmland.
Chiffchaff Phylloscopus collybita Summer visitor, few overwinter Woodlands and scrubby areas across Northern Ireland.
Coal Tit Periparus ater Resident Gardens and woodlands, especially favouring conifers.
Collared Dove Streptopelia decaocto Resident Gardens, parks, towns, and farmland.
Common Sandpiper Actitis hypoleucos Summer visitor Rivers, lakes, and reservoirs with stony shores.
Coot Fulica atra Resident Loughs, ponds, and slow-moving rivers with vegetation.
Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo Resident Coasts and large inland waters like Lough Neagh.
Corncrake Crex crex Very rare summer visitor Hay meadows and dense vegetation, mainly Rathlin Island.
Crossbill Loxia curvirostra Resident Conifer forests, such as Gosford and Tollymore.
Curlew Numenius arquata Resident, numbers boosted in winter Uplands in summer; coastal mudflats in winter.
Dipper Cinclus cinclus Resident Fast-flowing, clean rivers and streams.
Dunnock Prunella modularis Resident Gardens, parks, and woodland scrub across NI.
Eider Somateria mollissima Resident seabird Coasts, especially in the north and east; Strangford Lough.
Fieldfare Turdus pilaris Winter visitor Farmland, fields, and hedgerows, often in large flocks.
Fulmar Fulmarus glacialis Resident seabird Coastal cliffs for breeding, widespread at sea.
Gannet Morus bassanus Seabird, summer visitor Breeds on offshore stacks, seen widely around coasts.
Goldcrest Regulus regulus Resident Widespread in woodlands, parks, and gardens, favouring conifers.
Goldfinch Carduelis carduelis Resident Gardens, parks, and weedy ground.
Goosander Mergus merganser Resident and winter visitor Rivers and lakes, more widespread in winter.
Great Black-backed Gull Larus marinus Resident Coasts and, increasingly, inland landfill sites.
Great Crested Grebe Podiceps cristatus Resident Lowland loughs and reservoirs with vegetated margins.
Great Northern Diver Gavia immer Winter visitor Coastal waters, sea loughs, and some large inland loughs.
Great Spotted Woodpecker Dendrocopos major Resident Woodlands, parks and increasingly gardens.
Great Tit Parus major Resident Gardens, woodlands, and parks everywhere in NI.
Greenfinch Chloris chloris Resident Gardens, parks and woodland edges.
Greenshank Tringa nebularia Passage migrant, some overwinter Estuaries and coastal lagoons like Strangford Lough.
Grey Heron Ardea cinerea Resident Wetlands, riverbanks, loughs, and even garden ponds.
Grey Wagtail Motacilla cinerea Resident Fast-flowing rivers and streams.
Guillemot Uria aalge Seabird, summer visitor Breeds in huge colonies on sea cliffs like Rathlin Island.
Hen Harrier Circus cyaneus Resident and winter visitor Upland moorland and bog for breeding; lowlands in winter.
Herring Gull Larus argentatus Resident Coasts and inland towns and rubbish tips.
Hooded Crow Corvus cornix Resident Widespread in most habitats, less common in urban centres.
House Martin Delichon urbicum Summer visitor Towns, villages, and farmland, nests on buildings.
House Sparrow Passer domesticus Resident Closely associated with humans in cities, towns, and farms.
Jackdaw Corvus monedula Resident Farmland, towns, and coastal cliffs.
Jay Garrulus glandarius Resident Broadleaf and mixed woodlands, large parks.
Kestrel Falco tinnunculus Resident Open country, farmland, and even along motorways.
Kingfisher Alcedo atthis Resident Clean, slow-flowing rivers, canals, and lakes.
Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla Seabird, summer visitor Breeds on sea cliffs; found far out at sea in winter.
Lapwing Vanellus vanellus Resident, numbers boosted in winter Farmland and wetlands.
Lesser Black-backed Gull Larus fuscus Resident and summer visitor Coasts and inland areas.
Linnet Linaria cannabina Resident Farmland with hedgerows, gorse scrub, and coastal areas.
Little Egret Egretta garzetta Resident Coastal estuaries, lagoons and inland wetlands.
Little Grebe Tachybaptus ruficollis Resident Ponds, lakes, and slow rivers with plenty of vegetation.
Long-eared Owl Asio otus Resident Conifer forests and dense scrub.
Long-tailed Tit Aegithalos caudatus Resident Woodlands, parks, and gardens.
Magpie Pica pica Resident Extremely common in all habitats except deep forest.
Mallard Anas platyrhynchos Resident Almost any body of water, from park ponds to coastal bays.
Manx Shearwater Puffinus puffinus Seabird, summer visitor Seen on seawatching trips; breeds in burrows on islands.
Meadow Pipit Anthus pratensis Resident Moorland, grassland, and coastal marshes.
Merlin Falco columbarius Resident and winter visitor Upland moors in summer; coasts and farmland in winter.
Mistle Thrush Turdus viscivorus Resident Parks, large gardens, and woodland.
Moorhen Gallinula chloropus Resident Ponds, lakes, and slow rivers with bankside vegetation.
Mute Swan Cygnus olor Resident Loughs, rivers, and coastal bays.
Oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus Resident Widespread on coasts; also breeds inland by loughs.
Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus Resident Coastal cliffs, quarries, and increasingly on tall city buildings.
Pied Wagtail Motacilla alba yarrellii Resident Widespread near humans; in car parks, towns, and on farmland.
Puffin Fratercula arctica Seabird, summer visitor Breeds on grassy cliff tops, notably on Rathlin Island.
Raven Corvus corax Resident Uplands and coastal cliffs.
Razorbill Alca torda Seabird, summer visitor Breeds on cliff ledges alongside Guillemots.
Red-breasted Merganser Mergus serrator Resident and winter visitor Mainly coastal waters, especially sea loughs.
Red Grouse Lagopus lagopus scotica Resident Upland heather moorland, such as the Antrim Hills.
Red Kite Milvus milvus Resident (reintroduced) Mainly Co. Down around Castlewellan and Tollymore.
Redshank Tringa totanus Resident and winter visitor Coastal mudflats and inland wet grasslands.
Red-throated Diver Gavia stellata Winter visitor; rare breeder Coastal waters in winter; remote upland loughs for breeding.
Redwing Turdus iliacus Winter visitor Farmland, parks, and berry-laden hedgerows.
Reed Bunting Emberiza schoeniclus Resident Reedbeds, wetlands, and damp scrubby areas.
Ringed Plover Charadrius hiaticula Resident and passage migrant Sandy and shingle beaches and coastal estuaries.
Robin Erithacus rubecula Resident Ubiquitous in gardens, parks, and woodlands.
Rook Corvus frugilegus Resident Farmland with mature trees, forms large colonies (rookeries).
Sanderling Calidris alba Passage and winter visitor Sandy beaches along the coast.
Sand Martin Riparia riparia Summer visitor Nests colonially in sandy riverbanks, quarries and cliffs.
Shag Gulosus aristotelis Resident seabird Rocky coasts and sea cliffs.
Shelduck Tadorna tadorna Resident Coastal mudflats and estuaries.
Siskin Spinus spinus Resident Conifer woodlands; visits garden feeders in winter.
Skylark Alauda arvensis Resident Open farmland, moorland, and coastal dunes.
Snipe Gallinago gallinago Resident and winter visitor Bogs, marshes, and wet fields.
Song Thrush Turdus philomelos Resident Gardens, parks, and woodland across NI.
Sparrowhawk Accipiter nisus Resident Woodlands, but now common in parks and gardens.
Starling Sturnus vulgaris Resident, numbers swell hugely in winter Widespread in all habitats, from city centres to farmland.
Stock Dove Columba oenas Resident Farmland with mature trees, parkland, and coastal cliffs.
Stonechat Saxicola rubicola Resident Gorse scrub, heathland, and coastal areas.
Swallow Hirundo rustica Summer visitor Farmland, villages, and open country near water.
Swift Apus apus Summer visitor Towns and cities, almost exclusively airborne.
Teal Anas crecca Resident and winter visitor Wetlands, sheltered estuaries, and flooded fields.
Treecreeper Certhia familiaris Resident Woodlands and parks with mature trees.
Tufted Duck Aythya fuligula Resident and winter visitor Loughs, reservoirs, and park lakes.
Turnstone Arenaria interpres Passage and winter visitor Rocky shorelines and seaweed-covered beaches.
Wheatear Oenanthe oenanthe Summer visitor Uplands, coastal areas, and rocky ground.
Whooper Swan Cygnus cygnus Winter visitor Wetlands and flooded fields, especially around Lough Neagh.
Wigeon Mareca penelope Winter visitor Coastal estuaries and inland wetlands in large numbers.
Willow Warbler Phylloscopus trochilus Summer visitor Woodlands, scrub, and large gardens.
Woodpigeon Columba palumbus Resident Ubiquitous in all habitats.
Wren Troglodytes troglodytes Resident Abundant in almost any habitat with dense cover.

Images and Descriptions

Avocet

Avocet

A strikingly elegant black and white wader with a unique, long, upcurved black bill. Known for its distinctive feeding action, sweeping its bill from side to side through shallow water. Its long blue-grey legs are also a key feature.

Barn Owl

Barn Owl

A ghostly, medium-sized owl with a heart-shaped white face, mottled golden-buff back, and pure white underparts. Hunts silently at dawn and dusk over open country for small mammals. Its eerie, screeching call is unmistakable but rarely heard.

Bar-tailed Godwit

Bar-tailed Godwit

A large, long-billed wader with long legs and a subtly upcurved bill. In winter, its plumage is a plain grey-brown, but it can be distinguished from the Black-tailed Godwit by its barred tail and shorter legs.

Blackbird

Blackbird

One of the most familiar garden birds. The male is glossy black with a bright orange-yellow bill and eye-ring. Females are dark brown with a duller bill. Renowned for its beautiful, melodic, and fluting song, often delivered from a high perch.

Blackcap

Blackcap

A small, plain grey warbler. The male is easily identified by his neat black cap, while the female has a chestnut-brown cap. Often heard before it is seen, delivering a rich, fast, and musical warbling song from dense cover.

Black Guillemot

Black Guillemot

A small, pigeon-sized auk. In summer, it is entirely black except for large, obvious white wing patches and bright red legs and feet. It is much paler and more mottled in winter. Often seen bobbing on the water close to shore.

Black-headed Gull

Black-headed Gull

Our most common small gull. In summer, it has a chocolate-brown head (not black), a pale grey body, and red legs. In winter, it loses the dark head, retaining just a dark smudge behind the eye. A noisy and sociable species.

Blue Tit

Blue Tit

A tiny, acrobatic bird with a striking combination of blue, yellow, white, and green plumage. Easily recognised by its blue cap, white cheeks, and yellow belly. A common and welcome visitor to garden bird feeders, especially for peanuts and fat balls.

Brambling

Brambling

A finch similar in size to a Chaffinch. The male is striking with a black head, orange breast, and white rump conspicuous in flight. Females are browner and more subdued. They visit in winter, sometimes in large flocks, to feed on beech mast.

Brent Goose

Brent Goose

A small, dark goose with a black head and neck, and a small white patch on the side of its neck. The pale-bellied subspecies is the one that winters in NI in huge numbers, feeding on eelgrass in tidal mudflats.

Bullfinch

Bullfinch

A stocky, shy finch. The male is unmistakable with a bright pinkish-red breast, black cap, and grey back. The female is a much duller pinkish-brown. Both have a prominent white rump that is obvious in their bouncing flight.

Buzzard

Buzzard

A medium-to-large raptor, now Northern Ireland’s most common bird of prey. Usually seen soaring high on broad wings, with a wingspan over a metre. Its plumage is variable but typically mottled brown. Its call is a cat-like “mee-ow”.

Chaffinch

Chaffinch

One of our most common and widespread birds. The male is colourful with a pinkish breast, blue-grey head, and brown back. Both sexes show prominent white wing bars in flight. Has a loud, rattling song that ends with a flourish.

Chiffchaff

Chiffchaff

A small, olive-brown warbler that is often heard before it’s seen. It is best identified by its simple, repetitive, two-note song from which it gets its name: “chiff-chaff, chiff-chaff”. Constantly flicks its tail.

Coal Tit

Coal Tit

A small tit, less colourful than a Blue Tit. It is greyish-brown above and buff below, with a distinctive black head featuring large white cheek patches and a white patch on the back of its neck. A frequent garden feeder visitor.

Collared Dove

Collared Dove

A pale, sandy-grey dove, smaller and slimmer than a Woodpigeon. Its key feature is the narrow black half-collar on the back of its neck. Its monotonous and repetitive three-note “coo-COO-cook” call is a common sound.

Common Sandpiper

Common Sandpiper

A small wader recognised by its habit of constantly bobbing its tail and rear body. It has brown upperparts and clean white underparts that extend in a wedge up the side of the breast. Has a distinctive three-note piping call in flight.

Coot

Coot

A black, duck-like waterbird with a distinctive white bill and frontal shield on its forehead. It has large, lobed toes rather than webbed feet. Often seen squabbling noisily, chasing other birds with much splashing and flapping.

Cormorant

Cormorant

A large, dark waterbird often seen standing on posts or rocks with its wings held out to dry. It has a long, powerful, hooked bill and is an expert diver, pursuing fish underwater. Appears almost reptilian and prehistoric.

Corncrake

Corncrake

A secretive, quail-sized bird of farmland, now critically endangered in Ireland. It is rarely seen, but the male’s loud, rasping, mechanical “crex-crex” call, often heard at night, is unmistakable. A major conservation focus.

Crossbill

Crossbill

A stocky, starling-sized finch with a remarkable crossed bill, uniquely adapted for extracting seeds from conifer cones. Males are a dull brick-red, while females are olive-green. They are often seen in noisy flocks high in pine trees.

Curlew

Curlew

A very large, mottled brown wader, instantly recognisable by its incredibly long, downcurved bill. Its evocative, bubbling call is a famous sound of wild places but is sadly becoming rarer as breeding populations decline.

Dipper

Dipper

A unique, stocky bird the size of a starling. It has dark brown plumage with a striking white throat and breast. It is famous for bobbing up and down on rocks and for its ability to walk underwater on the riverbed to find insects.

Dunnock

Dunnock

A small, quiet, and unobtrusive bird often mistaken for a sparrow. However, it is slimmer with a fine, thin bill and a greyish head and breast. It shuffles along the ground, often near cover, with a nervous, flicking motion.

Eider

Eider

A large, heavy sea duck. The male is unmistakable in his black and white breeding plumage with a pale green patch on his nape. Females are a uniform mottled brown. They gather in flocks, or “rafts”, on the sea.

Fieldfare

Fieldfare

A large, handsome thrush visiting from Scandinavia. It has a grey head and rump, a brown back, and a heavily speckled breast. Sociable and noisy, they have a harsh, chattering “chack-chack-chack” call. Often seen feeding on berries.

Fulmar

Fulmar

A gull-like seabird with stiff-winged, gliding flight. It has a grey and white body, but a thick neck and a stout, tube-nosed bill distinguish it from gulls. Nests on cliffs and can spit a foul-smelling oil at intruders.

Gannet

Gannet

Our largest seabird, with a huge two-metre wingspan. Adults are brilliant white with black wingtips and a yellowish head. They are famous for their spectacular high-speed plunge dives into the sea to catch fish.

Goldcrest

Goldcrest

The UK and Ireland’s smallest bird. A tiny, round, olive-green bird with a brightly coloured crest – orange in the male, yellow in the female. Has a very high-pitched, thin call. Always active, flitting through branches searching for tiny insects.

Goldfinch

Goldfinch

A beautiful and colourful finch with a bright red face, black and white head, and striking yellow wing bars. Often seen in twittering flocks, known as “charms,” feeding on thistle heads or visiting garden niger seed feeders.

Goosander

Goosander

A large, sleek diving duck with a long, thin, serrated bill for catching fish. The male has a dark green head, white body, and black back. The female is grey with a shaggy, reddish-brown crest.

Great Black-backed Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

The world’s largest gull, a powerful and imposing bird. Adults have a jet-black back and wings, a white body, and a massive yellow bill with a red spot. It is a formidable predator and scavenger, dominating other seabirds.

Great Crested Grebe

Great Crested Grebe

An elegant waterbird, famous for its elaborate courtship “weed dance” in spring. In breeding plumage, it has spectacular orange and black head plumes. Sits low in the water and is an expert diver, often resurfacing surprisingly far away.

Great Northern Diver

Great Northern Diver

A large, powerful diving bird. In winter, it has a dark grey-black back and clean white front, with a thick, dagger-like bill. A superb swimmer and diver, it requires a long ‘runway’ to take off from the water’s surface.

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Great Spotted Woodpecker

A striking black and white bird with a bright red patch under its tail. Males also have a red patch on the back of the neck. Best known for its “drumming” – rapidly hammering its bill against a tree to mark territory.

Great Tit

Great Tit

The largest of the UK’s tit family. It has a black head with large white cheeks, a yellow underside, and a bold black stripe down its centre. Has a huge variety of calls, with a loud, two-syllable “teacher-teacher” song being common.

Greenfinch

Greenfinch

A stocky, bull-necked finch with a powerful bill for cracking seeds. Males are olive-green with conspicuous yellow flashes on the wings and tail. Their song is a series of twittering notes, ending in a wheezing “dzweee”.

Greenshank

Greenshank

An elegant, medium-large wader with long greenish legs and a slightly upturned bill. Its plumage is grey and white. It is a wary and vocal bird, often the first to give its loud, ringing “tyu-tyu-tyu” alarm call.

Grey Heron

Grey Heron

A huge, long-legged bird that can stand over three feet tall. It has grey, black, and white plumage and a powerful dagger-like bill. Typically seen standing motionless at the water’s edge, waiting to strike at fish.

Grey Wagtail

Grey Wagtail

A stunningly elegant bird, slimmer and with a much longer tail than the Pied Wagtail. It has a blue-grey back and vivid yellow underparts. As its name suggests, it constantly wags its long tail up and down as it walks.

Guillemot

Guillemot

A medium-sized auk that looks like a “flying penguin”. It has dark chocolate-brown upperparts and a white belly. In summer, hundreds of thousands cram onto narrow cliff ledges to breed, creating an incredible sight and sound.

Hen Harrier

Hen Harrier

A graceful bird of prey that glides low over the ground while hunting. The male is a ghostly pale grey with black wingtips, while the female is larger, brown, and streaked, with a conspicuous white rump.

Herring Gull

Herring Gull

A large, familiar gull with a light grey back, white body, and black-tipped wings. Adults have a powerful yellow bill with a red spot and pale eyes. An intelligent and adaptable scavenger, often seen in urban environments.

Hooded Crow

Hooded Crow

A striking crow with a black head, throat, and wings, but a contrasting pale grey body. It is intelligent and opportunistic. In Northern Ireland, this is our common crow, replacing the all-black Carrion Crow found in England.

House Martin

House Martin

A small, migratory hirundine with glossy blue-black upperparts and a pure white rump and underparts. It builds a distinctive enclosed mud cup nest under the eaves of houses. Often seen in fast-flying flocks, catching insects on the wing.

House Sparrow

House Sparrow

A small, stocky, and noisy bird. The male has a grey crown, chestnut-brown nape, and a black bib. Females are a plainer, uniform dusty brown. A highly social species, often found in chirping groups in hedges or under cafe tables.

Jackdaw

Jackdaw

The smallest of the common “black” crows, with a distinctive silvery-grey sheen on the back of its head and neck. Its most striking feature is its pale, piercing blue-grey eyes. A highly intelligent and sociable bird.

Jay

Jay

A colourful member of the crow family, though often shy and hard to see well. It is mostly pinkish-brown with a black moustache-like stripe, but has a flash of brilliant, electric blue on its wing. Famous for burying acorns for winter.

Kestrel

Kestrel

A small falcon famous for its ability to hover in one spot while hunting. It has a chestnut-brown back and a long tail. The male has a blue-grey head. Feeds on small mammals like voles, which it spots from its hovering vantage point.

Kingfisher

Kingfisher

A stunningly beautiful but shy bird. It is small, with a long dagger-like bill, bright blue back, and vivid orange underparts. Usually seen as a flash of electric blue as it flies low and fast over the water.

Kittiwake

Kittiwake

A delicate, medium-sized gull with a small yellow bill, dark eyes, and solid black wingtips that look as if they’ve been “dipped in ink”. Its call sounds like its name: “kitti-waake”. Nests in noisy colonies on sheer cliff faces.

Lapwing

Lapwing

A striking black and white wader with an iridescent green-purple sheen on its back and a long, thin crest on its head. Famous for its tumbling, acrobatic display flight and its distinctive, wheezy “pee-wit” call.

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Slightly smaller and more slender than a Herring Gull, with a darker grey to black back and wings. It has yellow legs, which is a key identification feature. Its numbers in NI increase significantly in summer with migrant arrivals.

Linnet

Linnet

A small, slim finch. In summer, the male has a beautiful crimson-pink forehead and breast, a grey head, and a brown back. They are social birds, forming flocks in winter, and have a pleasant, twittering song.

Little Egret

Little Egret

A small, elegant white heron with black legs and striking yellow feet. It was once a major rarity but has successfully colonised NI in recent decades. Often seen stalking small fish in shallow water.

Little Grebe

Little Grebe

A small, dumpy diving bird, also known as a Dabchick. In summer, it has a dark body, a chestnut throat, and a pale gape patch at the base of its bill. Lets out a distinctive, high-pitched, trilling call.

Long-eared Owl

Long-eared Owl

A secretive, medium-sized owl. It is perfectly camouflaged with mottled brown and buff plumage, but is named for its long ear tufts which are raised when alarmed. It is strictly nocturnal and very difficult to see.

Long-tailed Tit

Long-tailed Tit

An unmistakable tiny bird with a long, narrow tail that is longer than its body. It has a pinkish, black, and white plumage and a round, “fluffy” appearance. Moves about in noisy, excitable family flocks.

Magpie

Magpie

A very familiar black and white member of the crow family with a very long tail. In good light, its black feathers show a beautiful iridescent blue and green sheen. Intelligent and resourceful, with a harsh, chattering rattle of a call.

Mallard

Mallard

The familiar “park duck”. The male (drake) has an iridescent green head, a yellow bill, and a curly black tail. The female is a mottled brown for camouflage. The ancestor of most domestic duck breeds.

Manx Shearwater

Manx Shearwater

A medium-sized seabird, black above and clean white below. It has a distinctive flight style, gliding low over the waves on stiff, straight wings, banking from side to side and “shearing” the water’s surface.

Meadow Pipit

Meadow Pipit

A small, brown, streaky bird, often seen in open country. It has a thin bill and pinkish-brown legs. Its song is delivered during a parachute-like display flight, rising into the air before descending on stiff wings.

Merlin

Merlin

The UK’s smallest falcon, about the size of a Mistle Thrush. It is compact and powerful, known for its fast, dashing flight low over the ground in pursuit of small birds. The male is blue-grey above, the female is brown.

Mistle Thrush

Mistle Thrush

Larger, greyer, and more upright than a Song Thrush, with rounder spots on its breast. Known for its loud, rattling call in flight, like a football rattle. Sings its wild, beautiful, and repetitive song from the highest treetops, even in winter.

Moorhen

Moorhen

A common waterbird, smaller than a Coot. It is blackish with a red bill tipped with yellow, a red frontal shield, and a distinctive white line along its flanks. It nervously flicks its white undertail as it swims.

Mute Swan

Mute Swan

The familiar large white swan of parks and lakes. Adults have an orange bill with a prominent black knob at the base. It flies with its neck outstretched and with powerful, slow wingbeats that make a characteristic throbbing sound.

Oystercatcher

Oystercatcher

A large, noisy, black and white wader. It is unmistakable with its long, bright orange-red bill, and stout pink legs. Despite its name, it mainly eats mussels and cockles, not oysters. Has a loud, piping “kleep” call.

Peregrine Falcon

Peregrine Falcon

The fastest animal on the planet. A powerful, stocky falcon with a slate-grey back, barred white front, and a broad black “moustache”. Hunts birds by stooping on them from a great height at incredible speeds.

Pied Wagtail

Pied Wagtail

A familiar and bold black and white bird, constantly wagging its long tail. Often seen in towns and cities, feeding on insects in open spaces. In winter, large numbers gather in noisy roosts in city centre trees for warmth.

Puffin

Puffin

An unmistakable, comical-looking seabird. It has a black back and white front, but is famed for its large, triangular bill that is brightly coloured in red, yellow, and blue during the breeding season. Spends winter far out at sea.

Raven

Raven

The largest member of the crow family, the size of a Buzzard. It is entirely black with a massive, powerful bill and a diamond-shaped tail in flight. Its call is a deep, resonant “kronk”. Often seen performing aerial acrobatics.

Razorbill

Razorbill

A medium-sized auk, black above and white below, similar to a Guillemot. It can be distinguished by its much thicker, deeper bill which has a thin white line across it. It is less numerous than the Guillemot on breeding cliffs.

Red-breasted Merganser

Red-breasted Merganser

A sleek diving duck, similar to a Goosander. The male has a glossy green head with a wispy, punk-like crest, a white neck collar, and a streaky reddish-brown breast. The female is grey-brown with a shaggy brown head.

Red Grouse

Red Grouse

A plump, chicken-like bird of the moors, with reddish-brown plumage and a bright red comb over the eye. It is famous for its explosive call that sounds like “go-back, go-back, go-back!”. Feeds almost exclusively on heather shoots.

Red Kite

Red Kite

A large, graceful bird of prey, easily recognised by its long, deeply forked tail, which it constantly twists as it soars. It has a reddish-brown body, pale head, and distinctive white patches on the underside of its wings.

Redshank

Redshank

A medium-sized wader with mottled brown upperparts. Its key features are its bright orange-red legs and the extensive white trailing edge to its wings, visible in flight. It is a noisy bird, with a loud, piping “tyuu-hu-hu” call.

Red-throated Diver

Red-throated Diver

The smallest of the divers. In winter, it is grey and white, but in summer develops a grey head and a distinctive triangular red throat patch. It has a slender, slightly upturned bill, which helps distinguish it from other divers.

Redwing

Redwing

A small thrush, similar in size to a Song Thrush. It has a prominent creamy-white stripe above its eye and gets its name from the rusty-red flanks and underwing, which are visible in flight. Arrives from Iceland and Scandinavia for the winter.

Reed Bunting

Reed Bunting

A sparrow-sized bunting. The male in summer is striking, with a black head and throat, a white collar, and a streaky brown body. The female is much plainer and browner. Has a simple, somewhat jerky, repetitive song.

Ringed Plover

Ringed Plover

A small, stocky wader with a distinctive black and white head pattern and a black band across its white breast. It has a short orange bill with a black tip and orange legs. Runs in short bursts along the shoreline.

Robin

Robin

One of Northern Ireland’s most beloved and familiar birds. It is plump with brown upperparts and a famous bright orange-red face and breast. Known for its bold, confiding nature and its beautiful, melancholic song which is heard year-round.

Rook

Rook

A large, all-black crow, but more slender than a Carrion Crow. Adults are distinguished by the bare, greyish-white skin at the base of their pointed bill. A highly social bird, always seen in groups and nesting colonially.

Sanderling

Sanderling

A small, plump wader famous for its clockwork-like feeding action, running back and forth at the edge of the waves. In winter, it is very pale grey and white, one of our palest waders. In flight, it shows a bold white wing-bar.

Sand Martin

Sand Martin

The smallest European hirundine. It is brown above and white below, with a distinct brown band across its chest. They are social birds, breeding in colonies by excavating tunnels into vertical sandy faces.

Shag

Shag

Similar to a Cormorant but smaller and more slender with a thinner bill. In breeding season, adults are all black with a glossy green sheen and a distinctively punk-like crest on their forehead. Exclusively a marine bird.

Shelduck

Shelduck

A large, striking, goose-like duck. It has a white body, a broad chestnut band across its chest, dark green head, and a bright red bill. Often seen in pairs or small groups walking about on mudflats at low tide.

Siskin

Siskin

A small, acrobatic finch. The male is streaky yellowish-green with a black cap and bib, and bright yellow patches on its wings and tail. Often hangs upside down to feed on alder cones or peanuts at a garden feeder.

Skylark

Skylark

A small, streaky brown bird, often difficult to see on the ground. It is famous for its incredible song-flight, where the male rises almost vertically into the sky, delivering a continuous, beautiful, twittering song for several minutes.

Snipe

Snipe

A medium-sized wader with incredibly effective camouflage of mottled brown, black and buff stripes. It has a very long, straight bill and is most often seen when flushed, flying off in a fast, zigzag pattern.

Song Thrush

Song Thrush

A familiar brown-backed thrush with a pale breast covered in neat, arrow-head shaped spots. It is renowned for its beautiful, loud song, which consists of short, repeated musical phrases. Famously smashes snail shells on a favourite stone ‘anvil’.

Sparrowhawk

Sparrowhawk

A small bird of prey adapted for hunting other birds in confined spaces. The male is small with a blue-grey back, while the female is larger and brown. Has a characteristic “flap-flap-glide” flight pattern.

Starling

Starling

A noisy, gregarious bird. In summer, its glossy black plumage is iridescent with purple and green sheens. In winter, it is covered in pale spots. Famous for forming huge, swirling pre-roost flocks known as murmurations.

Stock Dove

Stock Dove

Similar to a Feral Pigeon but slightly smaller and neater. It is a uniform blue-grey with an iridescent green patch on its neck, but lacks the white rump of the Feral Pigeon. It has dark eyes, which give it a gentle expression.

Stonechat

Stonechat

A small, robin-sized bird. The male is striking with a black head, white collar, and orange-red breast. Usually seen perched conspicuously on top of a gorse bush, flicking its wings and making a sharp call like two stones being tapped together.

Swallow

Swallow

The classic sign of summer. A sleek, fast-flying bird with glossy blue-black upperparts, a reddish-brown throat, and very long tail streamers. Often seen perched on telegraph wires or swooping low over fields to catch insects.

Swift

Swift

A dark, scythe-winged bird that spends almost its entire life in the air. Larger than a Swallow, with long, swept-back wings. Often seen in high-speed “screaming parties” flying around buildings at dusk on summer evenings.

Teal

Teal

Our smallest duck. The male is intricately patterned grey with a chestnut head and a broad, iridescent green eye-patch. The female is mottled brown. They are fast, agile fliers, often taking off almost vertically from the water.

Treecreeper

Treecreeper

A small, well-camouflaged bird with a mottled brown back, a white belly, and a slender, downcurved bill. It behaves like a mouse, starting at the bottom of a tree trunk and spiralling its way up in search of insects.

Tufted Duck

Tufted Duck

A medium-sized diving duck. The male is a striking black and white, with a piercing yellow eye and a distinctive tuft of feathers at the back of his head. The female is a chocolate brown with a smaller tuft.

Turnstone

Turnstone

A stocky, short-legged wader with a unique feeding habit of flipping over stones and seaweed to find invertebrates. In winter it is dark brown and white, but in spring it develops a beautiful tortoiseshell or “calico” pattern on its back.

Wheatear

Wheatear

One of the first summer migrants to arrive. A smart thrush-sized bird, the male has a blue-grey back, black wings, a black eye-mask, and a peachy flush to his breast. All plumages show a conspicuous white rump in their bouncy flight.

Whooper Swan

Whooper Swan

A large, migratory swan from Iceland. It is similar to the Mute Swan but holds its neck straight, not in an ‘S’ curve, and has a distinctive wedge-shaped yellow and black bill, with more yellow than black. It has a loud, clanging, bugle-like call.

Wigeon

Wigeon

A medium-sized dabbling duck. The male is very handsome, with a grey body, pinkish breast, and a creamy-yellow forehead and crown. Often heard before it’s seen, thanks to its far-carrying, clear “whee-ooo” whistling call.

Willow Warbler

Willow Warbler

A small, delicate, olive-green and yellow warbler, very similar to a Chiffchaff. Best identified by its song: a beautiful, liquid, silvery cascade of notes that descends in pitch. Tends to have paler legs than a Chiffchaff.

Woodpigeon

Woodpigeon

Our largest and most common pigeon. It is mostly grey with a pinkish breast and a distinctive white patch on the side of its neck. Its wings make a loud clattering sound on takeoff. Has a familiar, gentle, five-note “coo-COO-coo, coo-coo” song.

Wren

Wren

A tiny, dumpy, brown bird, often seen with its short tail cocked vertically. For its size, it has an astonishingly loud, powerful, and complex trilling song. It is a restless and energetic bird, constantly hunting for insects in the undergrowth.

Other Birds by Country