Birds to See in East Sussex in June

131 species matching this filter.

All birds in East Sussex

East Sussex offers a rich tapestry of birdlife in June, with 131 species recorded across its diverse habitats — from the chalk cliffs of Beachy Head and the wetlands of Pevensey Levels to the reedbeds of Rye Harbour. This is a prime month for breeding activity, with species such as Barn Owl, Common Reed-warbler, and House Martin all busy raising young, while waders like Common Sandpiper can be spotted along the coast and estuaries. Whether you're exploring the South Downs or the county's renowned nature reserves, June is an exceptional time to enjoy East Sussex's birdlife at its most vibrant.

Resident

(104)
Avocet

Avocet

Recurvirostra avosettaLC

An elegant wader found year-round at coastal lagoons and marshes. Numbers have increased in recent decades, with Rye Harbour a key breeding and wintering site.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Barn Owl

Barn Owl

Tyto albaLC

A rare resident of farmland and marshes, hunting silently at dusk over the Pevensey Levels and downland field margins.

Rarely spotted

Nov–Sep

Bearded Tit

Bearded Tit

Panurus biarmicusLC

A rare but prized resident of extensive reedbeds, with sites like Rye Harbour offering the best chances. Listen for its distinctive pinging call.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Black-tailed Godwit

Black-tailed Godwit

Limosa limosaNT

A rare but increasingly regular wader at coastal pools and grazing marshes. Rye Harbour and the Pevensey Levels offer the best chances of sightings.

Rarely spotted

Mar–Jan

Blackbird

Blackbird

Turdus merulaLC

Abundant in gardens, woodlands and hedgerows throughout the year. One of the most familiar birds across East Sussex.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Blackcap

Blackcap

Sylvia atricapillaLC

Resident all year, increasingly visiting garden feeders in winter. A rich songster in spring woodlands and scrubby hedgerows.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Blue Tit

Blue Tit

Cyanistes caeruleusLC

A familiar garden resident found year-round. Readily takes to nest boxes and is one of the most frequent visitors to bird feeders across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Bullfinch

Bullfinch

Pyrrhula pyrrhulaLC

An uncommon but year-round resident of thick hedgerows and woodland. Shy and retiring, more often heard giving its soft piping call.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Buzzard

Buzzard

Buteo buteoLC

A common year-round resident, frequently seen soaring over farmland, downland and woodland edges throughout the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Canada Goose

Canada Goose

Branta canadensisLC

Widespread and common on lakes, rivers and parkland year-round. Readily seen at Arlington Reservoir and urban ponds across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Carrion Crow

Carrion Crow

Corvus coroneLC

A common and adaptable year-round resident, abundant in towns, farmland and along the coast throughout East Sussex.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Cattle Egret

Cattle Egret

Bubulcus ibisLC

A rare but increasingly seen resident, often found alongside cattle on the Pevensey Levels and other low-lying grazing marshes.

Rarely spotted

Mar–Jan

Cetti's Warbler

Cetti's Warbler

Cettia cettiLC

An uncommon but increasing resident of reedbeds and dense waterside scrub. More often heard than seen, with its explosive burst of song.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Chaffinch

Chaffinch

Fringilla coelebsLC

A common and widespread resident found in woodlands, hedgerows, parks, and gardens. One of the most frequently encountered birds in the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Chiffchaff

Chiffchaff

Phylloscopus collybitaLC

A common year-round warbler whose repetitive two-note song echoes through woodlands, parks and hedgerows across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Coal Tit

Coal Tit

Periparus aterLC

An uncommon resident favouring coniferous and mixed woodland. Often visits garden feeders in winter, particularly near the wooded Weald.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Gull

Common Gull

Larus canusLC

Present year-round but uncommon, frequenting playing fields, reservoirs and the coast. Numbers increase in winter with Continental arrivals.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Kingfisher

Common Kingfisher

Alcedo atthisLC

An uncommon year-round resident along rivers, streams, and ditches. Often glimpsed as a flash of electric blue darting low over the water.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Pheasant

Common Pheasant

Phasianus colchicusLC

A common resident across farmland, woodland edges and downland. Widely released for shooting, it is one of the most frequently encountered birds in rural areas.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Common Raven

Common Raven

Corvus coraxLC

An uncommon but increasing year-round resident, now regularly seen soaring over the South Downs and coastal cliffs.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Redpoll

Common Redpoll

Acanthis flammeaLC

A rare resident, scarce and easily overlooked among birch and alder woodland. Most likely encountered in winter flocks, sometimes with siskins.

Rarely spotted

Sep–Jul

Common Sandpiper

Common Sandpiper

Actitis hypoleucosLC

An uncommon wader found along rivers, reservoirs, and coastal pools. Most conspicuous on passage, bobbing along stony margins with a distinctive teetering gait.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Scoter

Common Scoter

Melanitta nigraLC

An uncommon but year-round presence offshore, often seen as dark lines of birds flying low over the sea. Passage peaks in spring and autumn.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Shelduck

Common Shelduck

Tadorna tadornaLC

An uncommon resident of estuaries and coastal mudflats, notably at Cuckmere Haven and the Ouse estuary. Breeds locally in rabbit burrows.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Common Starling

Common Starling

Sturnus vulgarisLC

A common resident famous for its spectacular winter murmurations over Brighton and Eastbourne piers. Numbers swell with Continental arrivals in autumn.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Coot

Coot

Fulica atraLC

Common on lakes, reservoirs and flooded gravel pits year-round. Often gathers in large flocks at Arlington Reservoir in winter.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Corn Bunting

Corn Bunting

Emberiza calandraLC

A rare and declining resident of open arable farmland. Small populations persist on the South Downs, where its rattling song can still be heard.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Curlew

Curlew

Numenius arquataNT

An uncommon resident found on coastal marshes and the Pevensey Levels year-round. Numbers have declined as a breeding bird in the region.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Dartford Warbler

Dartford Warbler

Curruca undataNT

A rare resident of gorse-covered heathland, vulnerable to harsh winters. Ashdown Forest is a key stronghold in the county.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Dunlin

Dunlin

Calidris alpinaLC

Found on mudflats and coastal lagoons year-round, with numbers boosted in winter. Pevensey Levels and Rye Harbour are key sites.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Dunnock

Dunnock

Prunella modularisLC

A common and unobtrusive resident of hedgerows and garden shrubbery. Its thin, high-pitched song is heard year-round across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Egyptian Goose

Egyptian Goose

Alopochen aegyptiacaLC

An established but uncommon resident found year-round on lakes, reservoirs and parkland. This naturalised species is slowly spreading across the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Collared Dove

Eurasian Collared Dove

Streptopelia decaoctoLC

A common resident in towns, villages and gardens throughout the county. Its monotonous three-note call is a familiar sound year-round.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Jay

Eurasian Jay

Garrulus glandariusLC

An uncommon but widespread resident of broadleaved woodland and mature gardens. Its harsh screeching call often betrays its presence.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Nuthatch

Eurasian Nuthatch

Sitta europaeaLC

Found year-round in mature deciduous woodland, often heard giving its loud ringing call in the Weald and downland copses.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Oystercatcher

Eurasian Oystercatcher

Haematopus ostralegusNT

A striking wader found on shingle beaches and coastal marshes year-round. Breeds at Rye Harbour and along the Pevensey shore.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Siskin

Eurasian Siskin

Spinus spinusLC

An uncommon resident favouring alder and birch woodland. Numbers increase in winter when continental birds arrive, often visiting garden feeders.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Skylark

Eurasian Skylark

Alauda arvensisLC

A common resident of open farmland and the South Downs, though declining nationally. Its continuous hovering song flight is a classic downland sound.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Eurasian Woodcock

Eurasian Woodcock

Scolopax rusticolaLC

A secretive resident of damp woodland, most often flushed unexpectedly in winter. Breeds in small numbers in the county's larger woodlands.

Rarely spotted

Jan–Jun

Eurasian Wren

Eurasian Wren

Troglodytes troglodytesLC

One of the county's most abundant residents, its explosive song rings from hedgerows, gardens and undergrowth all year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Goldfinch

European Goldfinch

Carduelis carduelisLC

A common and colourful resident, frequently seen in flocks feeding on teasel and thistle heads across farmland, gardens, and downland margins.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Green Woodpecker

European Green Woodpecker

Picus viridisLC

Resident in open woodland and downland turf, where its loud laughing call carries far. Feeds mainly on ground-dwelling ants.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

European Herring Gull

European Herring Gull

Larus argentatusLC

A familiar and noisy presence in coastal towns like Brighton and Hastings. Breeds on rooftops and cliffs, scavenging boldly year-round.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

European Robin

European Robin

Erithacus rubeculaLC

One of the most familiar year-round residents, found in gardens, hedgerows and woodland. Sings throughout winter across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Firecrest

Firecrest

Regulus ignicapillaLC

An uncommon year-round resident, breeding in coniferous and mixed woodland. Numbers bolstered in autumn by Continental migrants along the coast.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Fulmar

Fulmar

Fulmarus glacialisLC

Breeds on chalk cliffs at Beachy Head and Seaford Head. Present most of the year, gliding stiffly on ocean updrafts.

Uncommonly spotted

Nov–Sep

Gadwall

Gadwall

Mareca streperaLC

An uncommon year-round resident on reservoirs and gravel pits. Often overlooked among Mallards but breeds locally at sites like Arlington Reservoir.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Goldcrest

Goldcrest

Regulus regulusLC

Britain's smallest bird, common in coniferous and mixed woodland year-round. Numbers swell in autumn with continental migrants.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Black-backed Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

Larus marinusLC

A common and imposing resident of the coast, often seen on beaches, harbour walls, and at gull roosts throughout the year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Cormorant

Great Cormorant

Phalacrocorax carboLC

A common year-round resident found along the coast, rivers, and at inland reservoirs. Often seen perched with wings outstretched.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Crested Grebe

Great Crested Grebe

Podiceps cristatusLC

A common resident of larger lakes and reservoirs, also gathering offshore in winter. Elegant courtship displays begin in early spring.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Dendrocopos majorLC

A common resident of woodlands, parks, and gardens throughout the county. Its loud drumming on trees is a familiar sound in spring.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great Tit

Great Tit

Parus majorLC

A common and familiar garden resident found year-round. Its bold "teacher-teacher" song is one of the earliest heard in spring.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Great White Egret

Great White Egret

Ardea albaLC

A rare but increasingly recorded resident, seen year-round at marshes and wetlands. Part of a wider UK range expansion.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Green Sandpiper

Green Sandpiper

Tringa ochropusLC

A rare but near year-round visitor to ditches, streams and watercress beds. Often detected by its sharp call as it flies up from cover.

Rarely spotted

Jun–Apr

Greenfinch

Greenfinch

Chloris chlorisLC

A common year-round resident of gardens, hedgerows, and woodland edges. Numbers have declined due to trichomonosis but it remains widespread.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Grey Heron

Grey Heron

Ardea cinereaLC

A familiar year-round resident of rivers, lakes and marshes, often seen standing motionless at the Pevensey Levels and Cuckmere.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Grey Plover

Grey Plover

Pluvialis squatarolaLC

An uncommon but regular visitor to coastal mudflats and estuaries, present most of the year. Silver-grey plumage and black 'armpits' aid identification.

Uncommonly spotted

Aug–Jun

Grey Wagtail

Grey Wagtail

Motacilla cinereaLC

An uncommon resident found along streams and rivers in the Weald. More widespread in winter when birds move to lowland watercourses and coast.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Greylag Goose

Greylag Goose

Anser anserLC

Common on lakes, marshes and farmland throughout the county. Feral populations are well established and breed readily at wetland sites.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

House Sparrow

House Sparrow

Passer domesticusLC

A common and familiar resident of towns and villages throughout the county. Nests in buildings and gathers in noisy colonies year-round.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Jackdaw

Jackdaw

Corvus monedulaLC

A common year-round resident, often seen in noisy flocks around church towers, farmland and the chalk cliffs of the South Downs.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Kestrel

Kestrel

Falco tinnunculusLC

A common year-round resident, often seen hovering over downland, road verges and farmland across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Kittiwake

Kittiwake

Rissa tridactylaVU

Scarce year-round, most often seen offshore or at coastal roosts. Once bred on nearby cliffs but has declined dramatically across the UK.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Larus fuscusLC

A common year-round resident seen along the coast, at landfill sites, and increasingly inland. Numbers peak in summer and autumn.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Linnet

Linnet

Linaria cannabinaLC

A common resident of gorse-covered downland and farmland edges. Often forms large flocks on stubble fields and coastal scrub in winter.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Little Egret

Little Egret

Egretta garzettaLC

Now a common resident, thriving along estuaries, marshes, and coastal pools. A colonisation success story since the 1990s.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Little Grebe

Little Grebe

Tachybaptus ruficollisLC

An uncommon but widespread resident of ponds, lakes, and ditches. Often secretive in summer but more visible in winter.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Little Owl

Little Owl

Athene noctuaLC

A scarce resident of farmland and parkland, often perching on fence posts across the Low Weald. An introduced species now in gradual decline.

Rarely spotted

Oct–Jun

Long-tailed Tit

Long-tailed Tit

Aegithalos caudatusLC

A common and endearing resident, often seen in lively family flocks bouncing through hedgerows and woodland edges throughout the year.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Magpie

Magpie

Pica picaLC

A common and conspicuous resident found year-round in gardens, parks, hedgerows and farmland across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mallard

Mallard

Anas platyrhynchosLC

A common and familiar resident found year-round on rivers, ponds, lakes, and marshes throughout the county. Readily seen in parks and gardens near water.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mandarin Duck

Mandarin Duck

Aix galericulataLC

A rare but established resident on wooded lakes and rivers, favouring mature trees with nesting holes. Most easily seen in late winter displays.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Marsh Tit

Marsh Tit

Poecile palustrisLC

An uncommon resident of mature deciduous woodland, particularly in the Weald. A declining species easily confused with the Willow Tit.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Meadow Pipit

Meadow Pipit

Anthus pratensisLC

A common resident of downland grassland, heathland, and coastal margins. Numbers swell in autumn with passage birds moving through the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mistle Thrush

Mistle Thrush

Turdus viscivorusLC

An uncommon resident of parkland and open woodland, often singing boldly from treetops even in midwinter. Numbers are declining.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Moorhen

Moorhen

Gallinula chloropusLC

A common and widespread resident of ponds, streams, and ditches across the county. Often seen picking its way along muddy margins, flicking its white tail.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Mute Swan

Mute Swan

Cygnus olorLC

An elegant year-round resident of rivers, lakes and coastal lagoons. Breeds on the Cuckmere, Ouse and at Rye Harbour.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Northern Gannet

Northern Gannet

Morus bassanusLC

Seen offshore year-round, often plunge-diving spectacularly. Passage numbers peak in autumn off Beachy Head and other watchpoints.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Northern Lapwing

Northern Lapwing

Vanellus vanellusNT

An uncommon year-round resident of farmland and marshes, though declining as a breeder. Winter flocks form on the Pevensey Levels and coastal fields.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Northern Shoveler

Northern Shoveler

Spatula clypeataLC

Uncommon but present year-round on freshwater marshes and flooded fields. Most reliably seen at Rye Harbour and Pevensey Levels.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Peregrine Falcon

Peregrine Falcon

Falco peregrinusLC

An uncommon but year-round resident, nesting on coastal cliffs and tall buildings. Often seen hunting over the Downs and marshes.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Pochard

Pochard

Aythya ferinaVU

An uncommon diving duck on lakes and reservoirs year-round. Nationally declining, but Arlington Reservoir remains a reliable local site.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Red Crossbill

Red Crossbill

Loxia curvirostraLC

A rare resident of conifer plantations, with numbers varying greatly between years. Ashdown Forest is a key site for this unpredictable finch.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Red Kite

Red Kite

Milvus milvusLC

A rare but increasingly seen resident, soaring over the Downs and Weald as the population slowly spreads southward.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Red-legged Partridge

Red-legged Partridge

Alectoris rufaNT

An introduced resident found year-round on farmland and downland edges, though rarely encountered. Prefers arable fields with hedgerow cover.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Redshank

Redshank

Tringa totanusLC

An uncommon resident of coastal marshes and estuaries, breeding on grazing levels. Its loud piping call is characteristic of the Pevensey Levels.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Reed Bunting

Reed Bunting

Emberiza schoeniclusLC

An uncommon resident of reedbeds and wetland margins, found year-round at sites like the Pevensey Levels and Rye Harbour.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Ringed Plover

Ringed Plover

Charadrius hiaticulaLC

Breeds on shingle beaches and frequents coastal pools year-round. Rye Harbour is a key nesting site, with numbers rising on passage.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Rock Dove

Rock Dove

Columba liviaLC

Abundant in towns and cities year-round as feral pigeons. True wild-type birds may still occur on coastal cliffs near Beachy Head.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Rock Pipit

Rock Pipit

Anthus petrosusLC

An uncommon resident of rocky shorelines and chalk cliffs, often seen foraging along the base of the Seven Sisters and Beachy Head throughout the year.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Rook

Rook

Corvus frugilegusLC

A common resident forming noisy rookeries in tall trees across farmland and villages. Large flocks forage on the fields of the Low Weald.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Ruddy Turnstone

Ruddy Turnstone

Arenaria interpresLC

Forages along rocky shorelines and groynes, flipping stones for invertebrates. Present year-round but uncommon, favouring the coast at sites like Rye Harbour.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Song Thrush

Song Thrush

Turdus philomelosLC

A common resident heard singing from gardens and woodland throughout the year. Often seen smashing snails on paths and stones across the county.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Sparrowhawk

Sparrowhawk

Accipiter nisusLC

An uncommon but widespread resident, hunting small birds through woodland and gardens with dashing low-level flight year-round.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Stock Dove

Stock Dove

Columba oenasLC

A common resident of farmland and parkland, nesting in tree holes and old buildings. Often seen in small flocks over the South Downs.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Stonechat

Stonechat

Saxicola torquatusLC

A common resident of coastal scrub, heathland, and gorse. Readily seen perching prominently at sites like Beachy Head and the Cuckmere valley.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Tawny Owl

Tawny Owl

Strix alucoLC

A rare but resident owl of mature deciduous woodland, heard more often than seen. Declining in parts of south-east England.

Rarely spotted

Year-round

Treecreeper

Treecreeper

Certhia familiarisLC

An uncommon resident of mature woodland, spiralling up tree trunks in search of insects. Found throughout the Wealden woods year-round.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Tufted Duck

Tufted Duck

Aythya fuligulaLC

Found year-round on lakes and reservoirs, diving for invertebrates. Regularly seen at Arlington Reservoir and Weir Wood.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Western Marsh-harrier

Western Marsh-harrier

Circus aeruginosusLC

An uncommon year-round resident of extensive reedbeds and marshes, regularly seen quartering the Pevensey Levels and Lewes Brooks.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Woodpigeon

Woodpigeon

Columba palumbusLC

A common and familiar resident, abundant in gardens, farmland, and woodland throughout East Sussex year-round.

Commonly spotted

Year-round

Yellow-legged Gull

Yellow-legged Gull

Larus michahellisLC

A rare but increasingly regular resident, found among large gull gatherings at roosts and along the coast almost year-round.

Rarely spotted

Jun–Apr

Yellowhammer

Yellowhammer

Emberiza citrinellaLC

An uncommon but year-round resident of hedgerow-rich farmland on the Downs. Its jangling song is a characteristic sound of rural East Sussex.

Uncommonly spotted

Year-round

Breeding

(26)
Barn Swallow

Barn Swallow

Hirundo rusticaLC

A common summer breeder arriving from March, nesting in barns and outbuildings across the Low Weald. Gathers in large pre-migration flocks in autumn.

Commonly spotted

Mar–Nov

Common Redstart

Common Redstart

Phoenicurus phoenicurusLC

An uncommon summer breeder found in mature oak woodland and parkland. The male's striking orange tail and black face make it unmistakable.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Common Reed-warbler

Common Reed-warbler

Acrocephalus scirpaceusLC

An uncommon summer breeder found deep in reedbeds from April to October. Its repetitive churring song drifts from sites like the Pevensey Levels.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Oct

Common Swift

Common Swift

Apus apusLC

A common summer breeder screaming over towns and villages from late April to August. Nests under eaves and in older buildings across the county.

Commonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Common Tern

Common Tern

Sterna hirundoLC

An uncommon breeding visitor from April to September, nesting at coastal sites and feeding over inshore waters and gravel pits.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Cuckoo

Cuckoo

Cuculus canorusLC

An uncommon summer visitor arriving in April, favouring heathland and downland. Declining nationally, its distinctive call is increasingly hard to hear.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Aug

European Turtle-dove

European Turtle-dove

Streptopelia turturVU

A rare and rapidly declining summer breeder, arriving in May. One of the UK's most threatened birds, clinging on in scrubby farmland hedgerows.

Rarely spotted

May–Sep

Garden Warbler

Garden Warbler

Sylvia borinLC

An uncommon summer breeder arriving in April, favouring dense deciduous woodland with thick understorey. Its rich warbling song lacks the Blackcap's clarity.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Hobby

Hobby

Falco subbuteoLC

An uncommon summer breeder from April to October, hunting dragonflies and small birds over heathland, wetlands and open countryside.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Oct

House Martin

House Martin

Delichon urbicumLC

A common summer breeder nesting under eaves in towns and villages. Arrives in April and gathers in large flocks before departing by October.

Commonly spotted

Apr–Oct

Lesser Whitethroat

Lesser Whitethroat

Curruca currucaLC

An uncommon summer breeder arriving in April, favouring dense hedgerows and scrub. Its rattling song is easily overlooked.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Little Ringed Plover

Little Ringed Plover

Charadrius dubiusLC

An uncommon summer breeder on gravel pits and reservoir margins from March to September. Smaller and slimmer than Ringed Plover with a bold eye-ring.

Uncommonly spotted

Mar–Sep

Little Tern

Little Tern

Sternula albifronsLC

An uncommon summer breeder nesting on shingle beaches. Colonies at Rye Harbour are carefully protected from disturbance.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Aug

Nightingale

Nightingale

Luscinia megarhynchosLC

A rare and declining summer breeder, arriving in April. Dense coppiced woodland in the Low Weald remains a stronghold for this celebrated songster.

Rarely spotted

Apr–Aug

Nightjar

Nightjar

Caprimulgus europaeusLC

A scarce summer breeder on heathland in the Ashdown Forest area. Its churring song carries across warm evenings from May to July.

Rarely spotted

May–Jul

Ruddy Duck

Ruddy Duck

Oxyura jamaicensisLC

A rare breeding visitor to freshwater lakes, now extremely scarce following national eradication efforts. Any sightings are notable in the county.

Rarely spotted

Mar–Jun

Sand Martin

Sand Martin

Riparia ripariaLC

An uncommon summer breeder from March to October, nesting in sandy banks near rivers and gravel pits across the county.

Uncommonly spotted

Mar–Oct

Sandwich Tern

Sandwich Tern

Thalasseus sandvicensisLC

An uncommon breeding visitor arriving in March, nesting at coastal shingle sites like Rye Harbour before departing by October.

Uncommonly spotted

Mar–Oct

Sedge Warbler

Sedge Warbler

Acrocephalus schoenobaenusLC

An uncommon summer breeder arriving in April, favouring dense waterside vegetation at wetland sites. Its rapid, chattering song is distinctive.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Sep

Spotted Flycatcher

Spotted Flycatcher

Muscicapa striataLC

An uncommon and declining summer breeder arriving in May. Sallies for insects from exposed perches in woodland edges and mature gardens.

Uncommonly spotted

May–Sep

Tree Pipit

Tree Pipit

Anthus trivialisLC

A rare and declining summer breeder on heathland sites such as Ashdown Forest. Delivers its song in a distinctive parachuting display flight.

Rarely spotted

Apr–Oct

Wheatear

Wheatear

Oenanthe oenantheLC

An uncommon breeder on short-grazed chalk downland and coastal clifftops. Most visible during spring and autumn passage along the Sussex coast.

Uncommonly spotted

Mar–Nov

Whitethroat

Whitethroat

Curruca communisLC

A common summer breeder found in hedgerows, scrubby downland and field margins. Arrives in April and delivers its scratchy song from exposed perches.

Commonly spotted

Apr–Oct

Willow Warbler

Willow Warbler

Phylloscopus trochilusLC

An uncommon summer breeder arriving from March, favouring scrubby woodland edges and heathland. Its gentle descending song is a hallmark of spring.

Uncommonly spotted

Mar–Oct

Woodlark

Woodlark

Lullula arboreaLC

A rare breeding species found on heathland sites such as Ashdown Forest. Arrives from February and delivers its sweet, descending song in display flight.

Rarely spotted

Oct–Jun

Yellow Wagtail

Yellow Wagtail

Motacilla flavaLC

An uncommon summer breeder arriving from April, favouring damp meadows and the Pevensey Levels. A declining species across southern England.

Uncommonly spotted

Apr–Oct

Passage

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