Birds to See in Cambridgeshire in March

118 species matching this filter.

All birds in Cambridgeshire

Cambridgeshire in March is a rewarding destination for birdwatchers, with 118 species recorded as winter visitors linger and early spring migrants begin to arrive. The county's diverse habitats — from the vast wetlands of the Fens and the Ouse Washes to ancient woodlands and farmland — support an impressive range of birdlife, including Barn Owl, Common Crane, Eurasian Woodcock, and Mandarin Duck. March is a particularly exciting month to witness the transition between seasons, with resident species such as Great Tit and Magpie beginning to sing in earnest alongside overwintering flocks of Common Starling and Linnet.

Resident

(96)
Barn Owl

Barn Owl

Tyto albaLC

A scarce but charismatic resident of Fenland farmland, hunting voles along ditches and field margins at dusk and dawn.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Barnacle Goose

Barnacle Goose

Branta leucopsisLC

A rare resident, with records likely involving feral birds. Occasionally appears on gravel pits and fenland washes alongside other goose species.

Rarely spotted

Aug–May

Bearded Tit

Bearded Tit

Panurus biarmicusLC

A rare resident confined to extensive reedbeds at sites like Wicken Fen and the Ouse Washes. More often heard than seen, with a distinctive pinging call.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Black-tailed Godwit

Black-tailed Godwit

Limosa limosaNT

Present year-round on the Ouse Washes and surrounding wet grasslands, an important site for this uncommon species nationally.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Blackbird

Blackbird

Turdus merulaLC

An abundant year-round resident found in virtually every garden, park, and hedgerow. Winter numbers are boosted by Continental arrivals.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Blackcap

Blackcap

Sylvia atricapillaLC

A common resident found in woodland, hedgerows, and gardens throughout the county. Some overwinter, supplemented by continental birds visiting berry-laden shrubs.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Blue Tit

Blue Tit

Cyanistes caeruleusLC

One of the county's most abundant and familiar garden birds, present year-round at feeders, in hedgerows, and in woodland.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Bullfinch

Bullfinch

Pyrrhula pyrrhulaLC

An uncommon but year-round resident, favouring thick hedgerows, scrubby woodland edges and orchards. Its soft piping call often betrays its presence.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Buzzard

Buzzard

Buteo buteoLC

Now the county's commonest raptor, regularly seen perched on fence posts or soaring over arable fields throughout the year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Canada Goose

Canada Goose

Branta canadensisLC

A common and conspicuous resident of gravel pits, park lakes and river corridors throughout the county. Breeds readily in urban and rural settings.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Carrion Crow

Carrion Crow

Corvus coroneLC

Abundant year-round across farmland, towns, and villages. One of the county's most familiar and adaptable birds.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Cattle Egret

Cattle Egret

Bubulcus ibisLC

A rare but increasingly established resident, often found near livestock in Fenland pastures. A recent arrival to the county.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Cetti's Warbler

Cetti's Warbler

Cettia cettiLC

An uncommon but increasing resident of dense waterside scrub and reedbeds. Its explosive song bursts from cover at sites like Wicken Fen year-round.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Chaffinch

Chaffinch

Fringilla coelebsLC

A common resident of hedgerows, gardens and woodland throughout the county. Winter flocks are often boosted by Continental migrants.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Chiffchaff

Chiffchaff

Phylloscopus collybitaLC

A common resident whose distinctive two-note song is heard in woodlands and gardens year-round. Increasingly overwinters in Cambridgeshire's milder conditions.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Coal Tit

Coal Tit

Periparus aterLC

An uncommon resident preferring coniferous and mixed woodland. Less widespread than Blue or Great Tit in this largely lowland arable county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Crane

Common Crane

Grus grusLC

A rare but increasing resident, part of the recolonisation of eastern England. Occasionally seen over Fenland landscapes.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Common Gull

Common Gull

Larus canusLC

An uncommon year-round resident, frequenting playing fields, reservoirs and farmland, often mixed in with other gulls.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Kingfisher

Common Kingfisher

Alcedo atthisLC

Found year-round along the county's rivers, lodes, and drainage channels. A flash of electric blue along the Cam or Great Ouse.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Pheasant

Common Pheasant

Phasianus colchicusLC

Abundant and widespread across farmland, hedgerows, and woodland edges year-round, sustained by regular releases.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Common Raven

Common Raven

Corvus coraxLC

A rare but increasing resident, part of the species' recent eastward spread into the lowlands of Cambridgeshire.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Common Shelduck

Common Shelduck

Tadorna tadornaLC

An uncommon resident breeding around gravel pits and fenland washes. More conspicuous in spring when pairs display along waterway margins.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Snipe

Common Snipe

Gallinago gallinagoLC

Resident in wet meadows and reedbeds year-round, more conspicuous in winter when 'drumming' display is absent.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Starling

Common Starling

Sturnus vulgarisLC

A common resident that gathers in large winter roosts across the county. Numbers have declined nationally but it remains widespread here.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Coot

Coot

Fulica atraLC

A common year-round resident on lakes, gravel pits and the Fens, often forming large winter flocks on open water.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Corn Bunting

Corn Bunting

Emberiza calandraLC

An uncommon but characteristic resident of open arable farmland, delivering its jangling song from fence posts and wires.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Dunlin

Dunlin

Calidris alpinaLC

Present year-round but rare, found on muddy scrapes and washland edges, with numbers peaking during passage periods.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Dunnock

Dunnock

Prunella modularisLC

A common and unobtrusive resident of hedgerows and garden undergrowth, present year-round with a thin, warbling song.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Egyptian Goose

Egyptian Goose

Alopochen aegyptiacaLC

An uncommon but increasing resident, now breeding on gravel pits and park lakes. This naturalised African species is spreading steadily across the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Bittern

Eurasian Bittern

Botaurus stellarisLC

A secretive resident of Fenland reedbeds, most often detected by its deep booming call in spring. A prized county speciality.

Rarely spotted

Mar–Jan

Eurasian Collared Dove

Eurasian Collared Dove

Streptopelia decaoctoLC

A familiar resident of gardens, farms, and villages across the county, with its monotonous three-note call heard year-round.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Jay

Eurasian Jay

Garrulus glandariusLC

An uncommon but year-round resident of broadleaved woodland and mature gardens. Less numerous here than in western counties.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Nuthatch

Eurasian Nuthatch

Sitta europaeaLC

A rare resident slowly expanding its range into Cambridgeshire's mature broadleaved woodlands. Loud calls betray its presence at favoured parkland sites.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Skylark

Eurasian Skylark

Alauda arvensisLC

A common resident of the county's arable farmland and open fenland, singing in hovering flight year-round. Numbers have declined but it remains widespread.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Wigeon

Eurasian Wigeon

Mareca penelopeLC

Present year-round but most conspicuous in winter when numbers swell on the Ouse Washes and flooded fenland fields.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Wren

Eurasian Wren

Troglodytes troglodytesLC

A common resident found year-round in hedgerows, gardens, and fen edges, delivering a remarkably loud song for its tiny size.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Goldfinch

European Goldfinch

Carduelis carduelisLC

A common and colourful resident, readily visiting garden feeders. Flocks gather on waste ground and field margins to feed on thistles and teasels.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Green Woodpecker

European Green Woodpecker

Picus viridisLC

Resident in parkland and woodland edges, often heard giving its loud, laughing call. Feeds on ants in short grassland.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Herring Gull

European Herring Gull

Larus argentatusLC

A common year-round resident found at landfill sites, reservoirs and urban areas, with numbers swelling in winter.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Robin

European Robin

Erithacus rubeculaLC

One of the most familiar garden birds, present year-round and among the first to sing at dawn across Cambridgeshire.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Gadwall

Gadwall

Mareca streperaLC

A common resident on lakes and reservoirs, often overlooked among Mallards. Breeds at several Fenland wetland sites.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Goldcrest

Goldcrest

Regulus regulusLC

An uncommon resident of coniferous and mixed woodland, often hard to spot despite its high-pitched call. Numbers swell with continental arrivals in autumn.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Great Black-backed Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

Larus marinusLC

An uncommon but year-round presence, often seen at landfill sites and reservoirs, dwarfing other gulls in mixed flocks.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Great Cormorant

Great Cormorant

Phalacrocorax carboLC

Common and widespread year-round on rivers, lakes, and gravel pits, often seen perched with wings outstretched to dry.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Crested Grebe

Great Crested Grebe

Podiceps cristatusLC

A familiar resident on lakes, reservoirs, and gravel pits across the county, performing elaborate courtship displays in spring.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Dendrocopos majorLC

A common resident of woodlands, parks, and mature gardens. Its loud drumming is a familiar spring sound across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Tit

Great Tit

Parus majorLC

A common and familiar garden resident throughout Cambridgeshire. Visits feeders readily and nests in holes in trees and nest boxes across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great White Egret

Great White Egret

Ardea albaLC

Now resident year-round, increasingly seen at Fen wetlands and flooded fields. A recent colonist whose numbers continue to grow.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Green Sandpiper

Green Sandpiper

Tringa ochropusLC

Found along ditches, watercress beds, and flooded fields almost year-round, often flushing with a distinctive call.

Uncommonly spotted

Jun–Apr

Greenfinch

Greenfinch

Chloris chlorisLC

A common resident of gardens and hedgerows, though numbers have declined sharply due to disease in recent years.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Grey Heron

Grey Heron

Ardea cinereaLC

A common and familiar resident, seen year-round along rivers, ditches, and lakes throughout the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Grey Partridge

Grey Partridge

Perdix perdixLC

A declining farmland resident, now rare across the county's arable fields. Benefits from agri-environment schemes where present.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Grey Wagtail

Grey Wagtail

Motacilla cinereaLC

An uncommon resident found along rivers and streams, bobbing its long tail on weirs and bridges throughout the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Greylag Goose

Greylag Goose

Anser anserLC

A common resident breeding on gravel pits, lakes and fenland waterways. Large flocks gather on the Ouse Washes and flooded fields in winter.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

House Sparrow

House Sparrow

Passer domesticusLC

A common year-round resident closely tied to human habitation, nesting in roof spaces and hedges across towns and villages.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Jackdaw

Jackdaw

Corvus monedulaLC

A common and sociable resident, nesting in church towers and old buildings. Often seen in noisy flocks over towns and villages.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Kestrel

Kestrel

Falco tinnunculusLC

A familiar year-round resident, commonly seen hovering over roadside verges and arable fields across the flat Fenland landscape.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Larus fuscusLC

A common resident found year-round at landfill sites, playing fields and gravel pits, with peak numbers in summer.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Linnet

Linnet

Linaria cannabinaLC

A common resident of farmland and rough ground, often forming large winter flocks on stubble fields across the Fens.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Little Egret

Little Egret

Egretta garzettaLC

Now a common resident at wetlands, ditches, and flooded fields across the Fens, having colonised the county since the 2000s.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Little Grebe

Little Grebe

Tachybaptus ruficollisLC

A common year-round resident on ponds, ditches and slow rivers, its whinnying trill a familiar sound across the Fens.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Little Owl

Little Owl

Athene noctuaLC

A scarce resident of old farmland with pollarded willows and barns. Declining across the county and increasingly hard to find.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Long-tailed Tit

Long-tailed Tit

Aegithalos caudatusLC

A common resident often seen in lively, acrobatic flocks moving through hedgerows and woodland edges. Family groups roam widely outside the breeding season.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Magpie

Magpie

Pica picaLC

A common and conspicuous resident of gardens, hedgerows, and farmland across the county. Easily recognised by its bold black-and-white plumage and long tail.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mallard

Mallard

Anas platyrhynchosLC

Abundant on virtually every waterway, lake, and park pond across the county throughout the year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mandarin Duck

Mandarin Duck

Aix galericulataLC

A rare resident of wooded waterways and park lakes, most often recorded in winter and spring. This striking East Asian species nests in tree holes.

Rarely spotted

Dec–May

Marsh Tit

Marsh Tit

Poecile palustrisLC

A scarce and declining resident of mature deciduous woodland. Hayley Wood and similar ancient sites remain key locations.

Rarely spotted

Jun–Apr

Meadow Pipit

Meadow Pipit

Anthus pratensisLC

An uncommon year-round resident found on rough grassland, marshes and fen edges. Numbers increase in winter when birds from further north arrive.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Mistle Thrush

Mistle Thrush

Turdus viscivorusLC

An uncommon resident often heard singing from tall trees in parkland and churchyards, sometimes as early as January.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Moorhen

Moorhen

Gallinula chloropusLC

Common on ponds, ditches, and waterways throughout the county. Often seen picking its way along muddy margins.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mute Swan

Mute Swan

Cygnus olorLC

A common and elegant resident gracing the Cam, Ouse and fenland waterways year-round. Pairs nest along rivers, lakes and gravel pits across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Northern Lapwing

Northern Lapwing

Vanellus vanellusNT

A common resident of farmland and wet grassland year-round, though breeding numbers have declined significantly across the fens.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Northern Pintail

Northern Pintail

Anas acutaLC

An elegant dabbling duck found on the Ouse Washes and flooded fields, mainly in winter. Largely absent in midsummer.

Uncommonly spotted

Aug–May

Northern Shoveler

Northern Shoveler

Spatula clypeataLC

Common year-round on the Ouse Washes and gravel pits, using its distinctive spatulate bill to filter shallow waters.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Peregrine Falcon

Peregrine Falcon

Falco peregrinusLC

A rare but year-round resident, occasionally seen hunting over Cambridge and Ely. Has benefited from urban nesting sites on cathedrals and tall buildings.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Pochard

Pochard

Aythya ferinaVU

Present year-round on gravel pits and reservoirs but declining nationally. Winter flocks can gather on larger waterbodies.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Red Kite

Red Kite

Milvus milvusLC

An increasingly familiar sight soaring over farmland and motorways. Part of the species' ongoing recolonisation of eastern England.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Red-legged Partridge

Red-legged Partridge

Alectoris rufaNT

An introduced resident found on arable farmland and field margins year-round, sustained partly by game releases.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Redshank

Redshank

Tringa totanusLC

An uncommon year-round resident breeding on wet grasslands and washlands, with numbers boosted by wintering birds.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Reed Bunting

Reed Bunting

Emberiza schoeniclusLC

A common resident of reedbeds, ditches, and fenland margins, well suited to Cambridgeshire's extensive wetland habitats.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Rock Dove

Rock Dove

Columba liviaLC

Feral pigeons are abundant in Cambridge and other towns year-round, nesting on buildings and bridges.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Rook

Rook

Corvus frugilegusLC

A common resident forming noisy rookeries in tall trees across the county's farmland. Large flocks forage in ploughed fields throughout the year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Ruff

Ruff

Philomachus pugnaxLC

Scarce year-round on the Ouse Washes and fenland scrapes, once bred here but now mainly a passage and winter visitor.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Song Thrush

Song Thrush

Turdus philomelosLC

A common resident breeding in gardens, hedgerows, and woodland. Its melodious, repetitive song is a hallmark of spring.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Sparrowhawk

Sparrowhawk

Accipiter nisusLC

A year-round resident, often glimpsed dashing through gardens and along hedgerows. Breeds in woodland edges across the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Stock Dove

Stock Dove

Columba oenasLC

A common resident nesting in tree holes across farmland and parkland, often seen in fast, direct flight over fields.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Stonechat

Stonechat

Saxicola torquatusLC

An uncommon resident favouring rough grassland, heathland fringes, and fen edges. More often seen in winter months.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Tawny Owl

Tawny Owl

Strix alucoLC

A scarce resident of mature woodland and parkland. Its hooting call is heard in areas like Wandlebury and the Brampton Woods.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Treecreeper

Treecreeper

Certhia familiarisLC

An uncommon but year-round resident of mature woodland, spiralling up tree trunks in search of insects. Quiet and easily overlooked.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Tufted Duck

Tufted Duck

Aythya fuligulaLC

Common year-round on gravel pits, reservoirs, and park lakes. Breeds readily and winter numbers are boosted by continental birds.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Water Rail

Water Rail

Rallus aquaticusLC

A secretive resident of reedbeds and marshy ditches, more often heard squealing than seen. Present year-round.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Western Marsh-harrier

Western Marsh-harrier

Circus aeruginosusLC

Resident in the Fens, quartering over reedbeds and marshes year-round. The Ouse and Nene Washes are key strongholds.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Whooper Swan

Whooper Swan

Cygnus cygnusLC

An uncommon year-round presence, with the Ouse Washes hosting a notable wintering herd. Some birds linger through summer at fenland wetland sites.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Woodpigeon

Woodpigeon

Columba palumbusLC

An abundant resident found in gardens, farmland, and woodland throughout the county. One of the most familiar birds in the region.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Yellow-legged Gull

Yellow-legged Gull

Larus michahellisLC

Uncommon but present year-round, often mixed in with other large gulls at landfill sites, reservoirs, and gravel pits.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Yellowhammer

Yellowhammer

Emberiza citrinellaLC

An uncommon resident of farmland hedgerows and field margins, singing its distinctive 'little-bit-of-bread-and-no-cheese' song. Numbers have declined across the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Breeding

(6)

Non-breeding

(16)
Brambling

Brambling

Fringilla montifringillaLC

A rare winter visitor from Scandinavia, sometimes joining chaffinch flocks on farmland and beneath beech trees.

Rarely spotted

Oct–Mar

Common Loon

Common Loon

Gavia immerLC

A rare non-breeding visitor to larger water bodies in winter months, most likely at Grafham Water or gravel pits.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Mar

Common Merganser

Common Merganser

Mergus merganserLC

A rare winter visitor to larger rivers and reservoirs, occasionally seen in small parties from November to April.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Apr

Common Redpoll

Common Redpoll

Acanthis flammeaLC

A rare non-breeding visitor from autumn to early spring, associating with birch and alder stands. Often found in mixed flocks with Lesser Redpolls.

Rarely spotted

Sep–Apr

Eurasian Siskin

Eurasian Siskin

Spinus spinusLC

An uncommon non-breeding visitor from autumn to spring, favouring alder and birch along river corridors. Often detected by its tinkling flight call.

Uncommonly spotted

Sep–Apr

Eurasian Woodcock

Eurasian Woodcock

Scolopax rusticolaLC

A rare non-breeding visitor from November to March, skulking in damp woodland and hedgerows, most often flushed unexpectedly.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Mar

Fieldfare

Fieldfare

Turdus pilarisLC

A common winter thrush arriving from October, often seen in noisy flocks feeding on berries and ploughed farmland.

Commonly spotted

Oct–Apr

Golden Plover

Golden Plover

Pluvialis apricariaLC

Winters in flocks on ploughed fenland fields, often alongside lapwings. Absent during the summer breeding months.

Uncommonly spotted

Aug–Apr

Goldeneye

Goldeneye

Bucephala clangulaLC

Winters on gravel pits and reservoirs, with small numbers present from autumn to spring. Males show striking white plumage.

Uncommonly spotted

Aug–Apr

Greater Scaup

Greater Scaup

Aythya marilaLC

A rare winter visitor to larger waterbodies, sometimes found among Tufted Duck flocks from November to March.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Mar

Greater White-fronted Goose

Greater White-fronted Goose

Anser albifronsLC

A rare winter visitor from December to March, occasionally joining feral goose flocks on flooded fenland fields and the Ouse Washes.

Rarely spotted

Dec–Mar

Hen Harrier

Hen Harrier

Circus cyaneusLC

A rare winter visitor to the open Fenland landscape, occasionally seen hunting low over stubble fields and marshes.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Mar

Redwing

Redwing

Turdus iliacusNT

A common winter visitor from Scandinavia, arriving from October and foraging in hedgerows and open fields across the Fens.

Commonly spotted

Sep–Apr

Short-eared Owl

Short-eared Owl

Asio flammeusLC

A rare winter visitor to open Fenland, hunting over rough grassland and marshes. Occasionally lingers into early spring.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Apr

Smew

Smew

Mergellus albellusLC

A scarce but eagerly sought winter visitor, favouring gravel pits and reservoirs from December to March.

Rarely spotted

Dec–Mar

Water Pipit

Water Pipit

Anthus spinolettaLC

A rare winter visitor from November to March, favouring watercress beds and marshy margins. Most records come from the Ouse Washes and similar wetland sites.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Mar

Frequently Asked Questions