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Identification
Length: 11cm.
Adult
(male and female alike) are shiny, have jet black forehead, crown
nape and chin. They have a brown mantle, scapulars, back, rump and
upper-tail coverts. Cheeks and ear-coverts are white, with whitish-brown
sides of the neck. Their under parts are dirty white tinged brownish
on the flanks. The bill is black and they have grey-blue legs. The
Marsh Tit is very similar to the Willow Tit and is best distinguished
from it by the voice. The Marsh Tit has no pale patch on the wing,
although this is not easy to observe in the field. The young resembles
the adult but is tinged greyish and the under parts are white.
Call
Their call is a 'pitchu', also a 'tchaay', which is less grating
than the Willow Tit's. Their song is a monotonous and rattling 'schep-schep'.
Reproduction
Breeding starts from mid-April. The nest is a cup of moss
lined with hair and feathers to form a felted layer. It is built
by the female alone, and is situated in a natural hole in a stump
or tree, or sometimes a wall. She may occasionally excavate a hole.
The female will lay six to nine white eggs with reddish-brown speckles.
Usually single brooded in the North and double brooded in the South.
Incubation is carried out by the female alone for thirteen to seventeen
days. Both parents tend the young, who remain in the next for sixteen
to twenty-one days.
Habitat
Frequents deciduous woodland and scrub.
Natural
Food
Eats mainly insects and larvae. Will also consume seeds
and berries.
Where
to Feed
Table Feeder - Open topped
Table Feeder - Covered
Feeders - Minimum 1m height Suitable
Wild Bird Food from the Shop
Ark Wild Bird Mix
Ark Wild Bird XTRA
Ark Feeder Mix
Ark 'No Mess' Feeder Mix
Ark 'All-Purpose' Mix
Ark Songbird Softbill with Insects
Live Food
Fat Balls
Suet Blocks
Peanuts
Sunflower Seeds
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