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Description:
The Blackcap
is a somewhat stocky warbler only slightly smaller than a
Chaffinch in size. Both sexes are a dirty grey above. Males
are dusky-grey below, while females and immatures are warmer
buff-grey. Adult males display the black cap that gives the
species its common name. Females have a red-brown cap that
is also shared by immature males. During the autumn, the immature
males moult their red-brown cap to reveal the black cap of
an adult male.
Ecology & Behaviour:
Over recent decades
there has been a rapid increase in the numbers of Blackcaps
wintering in Britain & Ireland, with most of these birds
benefiting from the supplementary food being provided in gardens.
Recent work has shown that these wintering birds are not British
& Irish breeders. Instead they are birds from the central
European breeding population that have adapted their normal
migratory strategy to use new wintering areas (migration in
Blackcaps has a strong genetic component) in Britain & Ireland. The decision not to travel south across the Sahara
Desert may have some clear benefits, boosting overwinter survival
and leading to an increase in breeding populations.
Blackcaps will
breed in shrubby undergrowth and seem better adapted to use
those small blocks of rough scrub that occur within suburban
and even urban habitats than related warblers. During the
winter months, the wintering birds can be quite sedentary
coming to regular sources of food like berries and fat. It
is also at this time of year when feeding methods become increasingly
diverse with individuals feeding from bird tables as well
as on the ground (in summer feeding takes place off the ground
and up into the canopy).
Garden BirdWatch links
A 'Focus on' article on the Blackcap
appeared in issue 3 of the Bird
Table magazine. Garden BirdWatch participants can download
this article from the participants' only pages.
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