Stonechat - Saxicola rubicola
Saxicola torquatus
Stonechats are robin-sized birds. Males have striking black heads with white around the side of their neck, orange-red breasts and a mottled brown back. Females lack the male's black head, but have brown backs and an orange tinge to their chests. They frequently flick their wings while perched, often doing so on the tops of low bushes. As its name suggests, they utter a sharp loud call that sounds like two stones being tapped together. They breed in Western and Southern parts of the UK, but disperse more widely in Winter.
Whinchat (Saxicola rubetra)
Heaths, conifer plantations or coastal sites, especially in Southern and Western counties.
All year round but mainly Winter in Leicestershire and Rutland.
They eat mainly invertebrates, seeds and fruit such as blackberries.
Widespread but local in Britain, scarcer on the Eastern side of England.
An uncommon Winter bird and bird of passage in Leicestershire and Rutland.
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Species profile
- Common names
- Stonechat, European Stonechat
- Species group:
- bird
- Kingdom:
- Animalia
- Order:
- Passeriformes
- Family:
- Muscicapidae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 303
- First record:
- 27/12/2003 (Chris Lythall)
- Last record:
- 04/03/2026 (Gaten, Ted)
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