Ring Ouzel - Turdus torquatus
Slightly smaller and slimmer than a Blackbird - male Ring Ouzels are particularly distinctive with their black plumage with a pale wing panel and striking white breast band.
The Blackbird is similar but lacks the pale chest crescent, however juvenile Ring Ouzels are less distinctive and could be confused.
The Ring Ouzel is primarily a bird of upland areas.
March to September.
It breeds mainly in steep sided valleys, crags and gullies, from near sea level in the far north of Scotland up to 1,200m in the Cairngorms. Breeding begins in mid-April and continues through to mid-July, with two broods common, and nests are located on or close to the ground in vegetation (typically in heather), in a crevice, or rarely in a tree. The young are fed a diet consisting mainly of earthworms and beetles.
Ring ouzels can be found in upland areas of Scotland, northern England, north west Wales and Dartmoor. When on spring and autumn migration they may be seen away from their breeding areas, often on the east and south coasts of the UK where they favour short grassy areas. There are between 6,157 and 7,549 breeding pairs in Britain.
Leicestershire and Rutland status to follow.
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Species profile
- Common names
- Ring Ouzel
- Species group:
- bird
- Kingdom:
- Animalia
- Order:
- Passeriformes
- Family:
- Turdidae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 20
- First record:
- 07/04/2012 (John Greenwood and Pamela Gothard)
- Last record:
- 17/04/2025 (larrad, andy)
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% of records within its species group
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