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Conservation status: Amber

The swift is a medium-sized aerial bird, which is a superb flier. It evens sleeps on the wing! It is plain sooty brown, but in flight against the sky it appears black. It has long, scythe-like wings and a short, forked tail. It is a summer visitor, breeding across the UK, but most numerously in the south and east. It winters in Africa.

Overview

Latin name

Apus apus

Family

Swifts (Apodidae)

Where to see them

Look up in the sky in summer, often very high. They never perch on wires like swallows. You might see excited screaming parties of them careering madly at high speed around rooftops and houses, often low, especially towards dusk.

When to see them

April - August.

What they eat

Flying insects and airborne spiders.

Population

EuropeUK breeding*UK wintering*UK passage*
-85,000 pairs--

Distribution

Key

Illustrations

Audio

Patrik Aberg, Xeno-canto

Characteristics

Swift

Swift
  • Size: between robin-blackbird
  • Feather colours: brown, black, white, cream/buff
  • Beak colours: black/dark grey
  • Beak length: short
  • Beak thickness: short
  • Leg colour: black/grey, brown
  • Behaviour: part of flock, catches insects in flight

Similar birds