Basic Principles
Pipits often cause identification difficulties and are dismissed as ‘small brown streaky birds’. A closer examination, however, reveals them to be relatively distinctive, as well as charismatic. Three of the small pipits – the ubiquitous Meadow, the rather local Tree and the very scarce Olive-backed – are the subject of this ID guide.
Meadow Pipit
This species breeds from eastern Greenland in the west to north-west Russia in the east; many birds winter around the Mediterranean. It is a common breeding bird in Britain, particularly in the uplands of the north and west, but it is also present in winter and is a common migrant, too, with large numbers passing through the country in spring and autumn. These include birds from the breeding populations in Greenland, Iceland and the Faeroes.
Meadow is very much the ‘default pipit’, and intimate familiarity with its unique character is essential before attempting to identify any of the rarer species. Meadow Pipit is a ‘jizz’ bird, readily identifiable purely by the combination of its familiar high-pitched seet seet call, a usually high escape flight and a distinctive jerky and weak-looking flight action, with a rather ‘loose-looking’ tail. In flight the overriding impression is one of frailty and hesitancy.
The species is worth a much closer look, though. Concentrate first on its behaviour, noting its slightly nervous, even neurotic, demeanour on the ground, walking jerkily and erratically through the grass with an alert ‘head-up’ profile. Next look at its structure and note the fine bill, the small, rounded head, the slim body and, on the closest views, a strikingly long hind claw.
The plumage varies according to age and season and can appear anything from a fresh, slightly olive-brown through grey-brown to a pale faded fawn. The face pattern is worth looking at closely: Meadow Pipits always have a striking plain and ‘open’ face, mainly the result of a prominent eyering.
Tree Pipit
Most similar to Meadow Pipit is its arboreal cousin, Tree Pipit. This species has a large breeding range which extends from western Europe (though not Iceland or Ireland) to Siberia. Unlike Meadow Pipit, however, this is a long-distance migrant, wintering in Africa south of the Sahara and in the Indian subcontinent. It is a localised breeding bird in Britain, mainly in the west, but it also occurs in eastern Britain as a migrant from the Continent.
Although Tree Pipit resembles Meadow Pipit in plumage, in reality it is a rather different bird. If flushed from the ground it generally rises silently and flies low for a short distance before dropping into cover once more. In wooded habitat it is likely to escape to the safety of a tree, where it may walk with ease along the branches.
A good flight view reveals a rather distinctive shape with broad-based wings, a plump body, deep chest and tightly closed tail. The flight is smooth and bounding, not jerky and hesitant. High-flying migrants do tend to call, but are often so high that they are invisible. The call is totally unlike Meadow Pipit: a distinctive single buzzing peeezzz.
When observed on the ground its demeanour is very different, too. It creeps low to the ground on flexed legs, moving stealthily and deliberately through thick grass with a smooth fluid motion, quite unlike the jerky progress of a Meadow Pipit. It also has a distinctive habit of gently ‘pumping’ the rear body and tail. This is a shy species which prefers to slink off through the grass and hide rather than take to the air.
Now look at the structure and note the heavier, deeper-based bill, solid-looking head, more ‘neckless’ appearance, plumper, longer body and, on the closest views, a short hind claw (an adaptation to its arboreal lifestyle).
The plumage varies with age and season, too, but on a close view note a slightly stronger face pattern with a more prominent supercilium and a thin dark loral line, the whole face being less dominated by the eyering. There is normally a beautiful golden-buff wash across the throat and breast, and a contrast between heavy black streaking across the breast and finer lining along the flanks.
Olive-backed Pipit
This species nests in Siberia and north-east Asia. Like Tree Pipit it is a very long-distance migrant, wintering mainly in South-East Asia but, like many Siberian migrants, it also wanders to Britain in autumn. Formerly a great rarity, it is now discovered more regularly here and to date has amassed almost 500 records. It occurs mainly in October and records are concentrated on the east coast and Scilly, with Shetland being the most favoured location.
This species closely resembles Tree Pipit; indeed it can be seen very much as an eastern counterpart of that species. Confusion with Meadow Pipit is much less likely. Olive-backed Pipit shares all the behavioural and structural traits of Tree Pipit, and on an initial or brief view will most likely invite identification as that species. Its call is also almost identical – a high-pitched peeezzz, perhaps slightly higher pitched, thinner and less buzzing than Tree Pipit, but really quite similar.
Identification as Olive-backed Pipit has to rely on plumage, but fortunately this is in most cases a relatively distinctive bird. Unlike Tree Pipit, its mantle is a relatively unstreaked plain olive-brown. Look mainly at the head and underparts, however, and note a striking bird indeed, with a rather stronger face pattern than Tree Pipit, made up of a bold supercilium washed golden-buff before the eye, dark crown sides forming ‘eyebrows’ and twin pale and dark rear ear-covert spots.
The underparts are more strongly marked than those of Tree Pipit too, with very bold black blotching across the breast and finer lines down the flanks. These more striking contrasts almost give the impression of a miniature Redwing.