Small grebe with rich chestnut neck and fluffy appearance. The basic call is a rapid trill which rises in pitch and volume before trailing off:
All tagged trill
Small grebe with rich chestnut neck and fluffy appearance. The basic call is a rapid trill which rises in pitch and volume before trailing off:
A common bird on all lowland water bodies across the north of Switzerland. Its most frequently heard call is a goose-like “honk”, listen this and other calls here.
Common around marshland and slow moving water, but also seen in agricultural fields, especially in winter. Its call is a very loud shriek.
Thinly scattered throughout Switzerland, more common as a passage migrant. Easily overlooked but listen out for their di-syllabic call “ke-leer”.
A summer visitor to the lowlands of Switzerland, seen around farmland, lake edges where it can catch insects and small animals but also where it can scavenge. They make a distinctive winnowing call, take a look at the spectrogram to see the tremolo in their voice.
Both a resident and summer visitor to Switzerland, reaching high densities in Central regions. Frequents farmland and small villages. Numbers have increased dramatically in the past 20 years. The call is a very human-sounding long whistle followed by modulations:
Found across Europe. Hunts small birds which it catches on the wing in woodlands and gardens. Is mostly silent but does have a distinctive voice when it does call, it sounds rather worried to my ears.
Found throughout Switzerland, a common bird of prey on the plains and in the mountains. It has a far-carrying plaintive cry, often heard whilst soaring.
The most commonly seen falcon in our region. Distinctive hovering technique whilst hunting gives immediate identification, but also has a far-carrying “ki-ki-ki” call.
A shy bird of evergreen forests with dense undergrowth, seldom seen and with extremely high-pitched calls which are hard to hear.
A hill and mountain bird of forest and forest edges. Quite shy and with a strange “bubbling” call that may remind you of a dove if you listen carefully.
A shy and rare bird of old growth forest, one of the largest birds in Europe. It displays in leks with a characteristic “cork popping” sound.
A not so common bird of the mountains where it inhabits sunny slopes rich with boulders, rocky outcrops and loose scree below cliffs. Very hard to spot due to its cryptic colouration, it is often first detected from its staccato stridulating call:
An introduced species of forest edge and fringe of agricultural lands, now well established in Europe. It has a distinctive harsh “crow” call.
Very common in lakes and small water bodies. Generally noisy and aggressive with a variety of calls (which can listen to here) but the most often heard is a “kowping” call.
Found only in lowland marshy areas, in Switzerland it is mainly a passage migrant but with some few pairs breeding in areas under protection. It has a dramatic display flight with a characteristic call, learn more here.
A very interesting bird, most active at dusk and dawn (crepuscular). Basically a marsh-dwelling bird that prefers forest and flies in the dark to display its territory and attract females making a very distinctive croaking sound.
Mostly a winter visitor to Switzerland from its core range to the north and north-east. Found in marshes and river margins. Hard to spot when not in flight. It has a distinctive “chip-per” call when stationary and also in flight. Famous for its “drumming”.
A bird of the forest usually found up in the canopy, will occasionally visit fields. Superficially like a Wood Pigeon but with a very different call, which may remind you of an owl.
A very common bird in all types of woodland below 1000m, in some places can constitute a nuisance. Sings “take two cows taffy…”