![Firecrest](/sites/default/files/styles/spotlight_default/public/2018-03/DTI04_10052008Firecrest0474.jpg?h=803a2a3a&itok=4_-oUAR8)
Firecrest ©David Tipling/2020VISION
Firecrest
The tiny firecrest vies with the goldcrest for the title of the UK's smallest bird. Once just a visitor, the firecrest can now be found breeding in woodlands in the south of England.
Scientific name
Regulus ignicapillaWhen to see
January to DecemberSpecies information
Statistics
Length: 9cmWingspan: 14cm
Weight: 6g
Classified in the UK as Green under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021). Protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, 1981.
Habitats
About
The firecrest is a tiny kinglet, closely related to the similarly patterned goldcrest. Firecrests were first recorded breeding in the UK in Hampshire in 1962, and are now found in coniferous forests throughout much of southern England. In autumn and winter, numbers increase as migrant firecrests arrive across the North Sea. At this time of year, they join flocks of other small birds and can often be found away from breeding sites, including in parks and gardens.How to identify
This tiny bird is similar in appearance to the goldcrest, olive-green above and buff-white below, but the colours are brighter on a firecrest. Males have a bright orange crown edged with black, while the female's crown is yellow. The firecrest's most distinctive feature is a bright white line above the eye, which is not present in goldcrests.Distribution
Firecrests can now be found as breeding birds in much of southern England. Elsewhere, they are typically seen over winter or during spring and autumn migration, especially in the south-west and on the east coast of England.In our area
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Did you know?
Like the goldcrest, the firecrest's scientific name has a royal ring to it. Regulus ignicapilla translates roughly as the fire-capped little king, a reference to the beautiful orange crown of the male.Join today
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