F is for Fieldfare

They’re one of the two thrush species which visit Britain in large numbers for the autumn and winter, alongside the handsome and perhaps better known redwing.

Image: By Yuqi Qiao (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

I grew particularly fond of the fieldfare whilst volunteering as a warden at the RSPB’s Otmoor reserve in Oxfordshire.  As I went about my rounds, flocks of tens or sometimes even hundreds would rise one by one from the hedgerows and lines of trees alongside the path, their harsh and wild cries (a resounding ‘chack’, often given in threes: ‘chack-chack-chack’) perfectly evocative of the often bleak and wintry views across the reserve. This past winter I spent a lot of time birding in open countryside in Hampshire, and again fieldfares were often numerous – moving ahead of me in numbers along almost every hedgerow and byway. They’re one of the two thrush species which visit Britain in large numbers for the autumn and winter, alongside the handsome and perhaps better known redwing. Whilst lacking that bird’s smart red under-wing and bright eyebrow, fieldfares are well marked and still colourful; their slate-grey head, nape and rump are particularly distinctive.

But why write about a bird which will soon be leaving us again, save for a tiny handful of breeding birds in the Scottish Highlands? Well, partially because I don’t control the order of the alphabet, but also because just last week I heard what will probably be my last noisy ‘chack’ until October. It came on a warm, sunny afternoon that I mostly spent photographing butterflies and spring flowers – very much a day on which nature was crossing over from one season to the next, but with the fieldfare’s strident voice serving as a reminder that autumn and then winter will soon enough come round again.

When the fieldfares do return, the BTO hopes that birders up and down Britain will be more than usually ready for them: this year sees the commencement of a new Wintering Thrushes Survey. The aim is to better understand the overwintering habits and preferences of thrushes in the British Isles: three residents, blackbirds, song and mistle thrushes; as well as fieldfares and redwings. For the visitors, there are a lot of unknowns concerning their cross country movement during the winter, after initially arriving on the east coast. What factors drive their distribution, and the timing of their departure in spring? Perhaps the results of the survey will shed a little more light on the ultimate winter wandering thrush, the fieldfare, and help to conserve the British countryside’s status as a winter haven for this star species.

Tags:

No comments yet.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published.*

Tick the box or answer the captcha.

You might also like

  • South African Birds Feel the Heat

    A study of the physiology of birds in the Western Cape in South Africa suggests that birds’ population decline in response to warming temperatures is more complex, and more serious, than previously thought.

    By Alex Taylor
  • An A-Z of British Birds, B is for Bashful

    The famous booming is the most conspicuous thing they’ll ever do, though, unless you happen to see one in flight. Most of the time they’re masters of disguise.

    By Chris Foster
  • Five conservation success stories from the UK

    It should be remembered that positive change is, in fact, possible. And that, when we put our minds to it, we have shown time and time again that it is possible to reverse negative trends in our wildlife populations. That through practical conservation work, changing attitudes and a healthy dose of optimism, we can make a difference. As such, and in dire need of a more upbeat topic, below I have included a list of five such success stories.

    By James Common
  • Piping Plovers Losing Nesting Habitat

    Findings suggest that if drainage continues, there will be a continued decline in the breeding habitat for piping plovers at wetlands in the Great Plains.

    By Alex Taylor