Credit: Tony Cox / WTML
What do willow warblers eat?
Willow warblers are active during the day, feeding on a variety of small insects and spiders, as well as fruits and berries in the autumn.
A common and dainty summer visitor with a mournful song that rings through the trees. The willow warbler likes to sing and shake its feathers while it forages for insects.
Common name: willow warbler
Scientific name: Phylloscopus trochilus
Family: Sylviidae (warblers)
Habitat: woodland, scrub, gardens
Diet: invertebrates
Predators: birds of prey, domestic cats
Origin: native
Willow warblers have a yellowish or olive green breast with paler underparts. They have a brownish head with a pale yellow-green stripe above the eye, and flesh-coloured legs.
Long primary feathers on its brown wings give this bird a long-winged appearance, reflecting the huge distances it travels on migration. With a typical weight of around 9g, this is a dainty bird of a similar size to a blue tit.
Not to be confused with: the chiffchaff, which looks very similar but can be differentiated by its song and darker legs. Chiffchaffs make a ‘chiff-chaff’ sound while willow warblers have a lovely warble that descends in scale.
Credit: Tony Cox / WTML
Willow warblers are active during the day, feeding on a variety of small insects and spiders, as well as fruits and berries in the autumn.
Willow warblers build distinctive, dome-shaped nests with a hole in the side, close to the ground. Very small eggs are laid in these oven-like nests – they are so tiny that three eggs weigh the same as a penny.
The smooth, glossy white eggs are speckled with reddish-brown. The female incubates the eggs by herself, but after the young hatch they are fed by both parents.
Credit: John Bridges / WTML
Willow warblers leave the UK between July and September to spend the winter in Africa, south of the Sahara.
Unlike most other birds, willow warblers moult their feathers twice a year.
Willow warblers like young, open woodland. They are easy to spot (or hear) among birch, willow and alder, all of which are usually found near water.
Credit: Robert Thompson / naturepl.com
Look out for willow warblers in woodland and scrub from March onwards. Their melancholy song descends in scale and is unmistakeable.
Audio: Tony Fulford / xeno-canto.org
Record the comings and goings of key feathered friends and help scientists track the effects of climate change on wildlife.
Take part in our Nature's Calendar surveyThe number of willow warblers in the UK has fallen by around 44% since 1970. Populations are, however, faring better in Scotland and the north of England than in the south, possibly due to changes in the availability of favourable breeding habitat.