Marsh Tit

Marsh Tit

Poecile palustris
Marsh Tit, Liz Cutting

Introduction

A bold character with a scolding 'pitchuu' call, the Marsh Tit has declined significantly and has been Red-listed in the UK since 2022.

Widely distributed in England and Wales, the Marsh Tit favours mature deciduous woodland habitat with some understorey in which to forage. Never numerous, the species is seen mostly in singles or pairs, and adults will stay on or near territory all year round. Birds will also visit garden bird tables. The Marsh Tit is very similar in appearance to the Willow Tit, and care is needed to identify these species in the field.

The species nests in natural holes (although may take to nest boxes) and normally lays a single clutch of seven to nine eggs each spring. Young birds disperse a few kilometres from their parents' territory. The UK population shows a downward trend since the mid-1960s, possibly underpinned by a negative trend in annual survival associated with habitat degradation.

  • Our Trends Explorer gives you the latest insight into how this species' population is changing.
Marsh Tit, Liz Cutting

Key Stats

Status
Common
Common
Weight
Weight
10.7g
Eggs
Eggs
7-9
BTO Records
BTO Records
210k records
Population and distribution stats for:
Population Change
Population Change
80% decrease 1967–2022
Population Size
Population Size
29k Territories
Distribution Change
Distribution_change
-22.5% contraction
Population Size
Population Size
No current data
Distribution Change
Distribution_change
-4.3% contraction

Identification

Curated resources to aid in the identification of Marsh Tit

ID Videos

This section features BTO training videos headlining this species, or featuring it as a potential confusion species.

GBW: Coal Tit and Marsh Tit

Marsh and Willow Tits

Songs and Calls

Listen to example recordings of the main vocalisations of Marsh Tit, provided by xeno-canto contributors.

Call:

Movement

Information about Marsh Tit movements and migration based on online bird portals (e.g. BirdTrack), Ringing schemes and tracking studies.

Britain & Ireland movement

View a summary of recoveries in the Online Ringing Report

Foreign locations of birds ringed or recovered in Britain & Ireland

Dots show the foreign destinations of birds ringed in Britain & Ireland, and the origins of birds ringed overseas that were subsequently recaptured, resighted or found dead in Britain & Ireland. Dot colours indicate the time of year that the species was present at the location.

  • Winter (Nov-Feb)
  • Spring (Mar-Apr)
  • Summer (May-Jul)
  • Autumn (Aug-Oct)
Foreign locations of birds ringed or recovered in Britain & Ireland

European movements

EuroBirdPortal uses birdwatcher's records, such as those logged in BirdTrack to map the flows of birds as they arrive and depart Europe. See maps for this species here.

Biology

Lifecycle and body size information for Marsh Tit, including statistics on nesting, eggs and lifespan based on BTO ringing and nest recording data.

Productivity and Nesting

Nesting timing

Average (range) fo first clutch laying dates
20 Apr (9 Apr-6 May)
Typical (exceptional) number of broods
1(2)

Egg measurements

Typical length x width
16x12 mm
Mass (% shell)
1.2g (6%)

Clutch Size

Typical number
9-7 eggs
Average ±1 standard deviation
7.77±1.45 eggs
Observed minimum and maximum
2-11 eggs

Incubation

Incubation by
Female
Typical duration
16-14 days
Observed average ±1 standard deviation
14.64±1.54 days
Observed minimum and maximum
12-17 days

Fledging

Type of chick
Altricial, downy
Typical duration
21-18 days
Observed average ±1 standard deviation
19.14±2.12 days
Minimum and maximum
15-22.5 days
N=707, Source
Visit our Trends Explorer for trend graphs and country statistics.

Survival and Longevity

Survival is shown as the proportion of birds surviving from one year to the next and is derived from bird ringing data. It can also be used to estimate how long birds typically live.

View number ringed each year in the Online Ringing Report.

lifespan

Typical life expectancy of bird reaching breeding age
2 years with breeding typically at 1 year
Maximum age from a ringed bird
11 years, 3 months, (set in 2015)

Survival of adults

All adults
0.47±0.06

Survival of juveniles

All juveniles
0.19±0.04 (in first year)
Visit our Trends Explorer for trend graphs and country statistics.

Biometrics

Wing length and body weights are from live birds (source).

Wing length

Average ±1 std deviation; range and sample size in brackets.
Juvenile
62.1±1.8 mm
(59-65 mm, N=1417)
All adults
62.4±1.9 mm
(59.5-65 mm, N=1211)
Female
61.5±1.6 mm
(59-64 mm, N=139)
Male
63.3±2 mm
(60-66 mm, N=92)

Body weight

Average ±1 std deviation; range and sample size in brackets.
Juvenile
62.1±1.8 mm
(59-65 mm, N=1417)
All adults
62.4±1.9 mm
(59.5-65 mm, N=1211)
Female
61.5±1.6 mm
(59-64 mm, N=139)
Male
63.3±2 mm
(60-66 mm, N=92)
Visit our Trends Explorer for trend graphs and country statistics.

Ring Size

A

Classification, names and codes

Taxonomy, names and species codes for Marsh Tit

Classification and Codes

  • Order: Passeriformes
  • Family: Paridae
  • Scientific name: Poecile palustris
  • Authority: Linnaeus, 1758
  • BTO 2-letter code: MT
  • BTO 5-letter code: MARTI
  • Euring code number: 14400

Alternate species names

  • Catalan: mallerenga d'aigua
  • Czech: sýkora babka
  • Danish: Sumpmejse
  • Dutch: Glanskop
  • Estonian: salutihane e. sootihane
  • Finnish: viitatiainen
  • French: Mésange nonnette
  • Gaelic: Cailleachag-lòin
  • German: Sumpfmeise
  • Hungarian: barátcinege
  • Icelandic: Laufmeisa
  • Irish: Meantán Lathaí
  • Italian: Cincia bigia
  • Latvian: purva zilite
  • Lithuanian: paprastoji pilkoji zyle
  • Norwegian: Løvmeis
  • Polish: sikora uboga
  • Portuguese: chapim-palustre
  • Slovak: sýkorka hôrna
  • Slovenian: mocvirska sinica
  • Spanish: Carbonero palustre
  • Swedish: entita
  • Welsh: Titw'r Wern

Research

Interpretation and scientific publications about Marsh Tit from BTO scientists.

Causes of Change and Solutions

Causes of change

There is good evidence that changes in the habitat quality of woodlands, particularly a loss of understorey, have been responsible for the decline in Marsh Tits. Analysis of the BTO's ring-recovery archive provides evidence that there has been a significant negative trend in annual survival rates during the period of decline, although this is based on a small sample size.

Further information on causes of change

Analysis of the BTO's ring-recovery archive provides evidence that there has been a significant negative trend in annual survival rates during the period of decline, although this is based on a small sample size. The absence of any reduction in breeding performance as the population has declined supports a reduction in annual survival as the demographic mechanism (Siriwardena 2006). Nest failure rates have fallen during the period of decline, but no trend is evident in the number of fledglings per breeding attempt.

One hypothesis relating to the causes of decline is that changes in woodland understorey have reduced habitat quality, due to increased browsing by deer (Perrins 2003, Fuller et al. 2005). Carpenter (2008) and Carpenter et al. (2010) conducted a detailed study providing good evidence that Marsh Tits were more likely to locate their territories in sections of woodland with more understorey cover. Carpenter found that birds in territories with more understorey raised more and heavier young than did birds in territories with less understorey, although this was based on only one year of data. The same study reported that understorey and low canopy sections were also important during winter while Hinsley et al. (2007) provide further evidence that this was important, showing that that Marsh Tits were selecting the understorey and habitat lower down in the woodland canopy. Another field study conducted by Broughton et al. (2006), however, did not find any difference in the amount of shrub layer in Marsh Tit territories compared to pseudo-territories, although this was from just one site and the authors noted that the understorey there was unusually healthy and complete, perhaps explaining this result.

A reduction in habitat quality through fragmentation is another possible factor that has contributed to declines, although there has been little fragmentation of woodland in a gross sense in recent years. Nevertheless, Hinsley et al. (1995) found that Marsh Tits need a minimum wood size of 0.5 ha and it's possible that habitat deterioration has reduced effective habitat patch size.

Another hypothesis concerning causes of decline relates to competition and nest predation. Marsh Tit is subdominant to both Great Tit and Blue Tit but Siriwardena (2006) found no evidence for population effects of the Marsh Tit being outcompeted for natural nest cavities. Similarly, the same study found no evidence that avian nest predation is a major factor in the long-term decline as Marsh Tit abundance was not significantly related to abundance in the previous year of any of the nest predators considered (Siriwardena 2006). Amar et al. (2006) found no association between population change and grey squirrel abundance and adding to this, Smart et al. (2007) conducted an initial analysis and showed that Marsh Tit declines were also unlikely to be caused by predation by grey squirrel, as presence and abundance of Marsh Tit was positively related to squirrel density.

Information about conservation actions

Marsh Tits have large territories and hence require large, mature woodlands with extensive coverage by understorey vegetation (Broughton et al. 2006, 2012; Hinsley et al. 2007). At a local level, therefore, actions to encourage woodland maturation and to improve the quantity and quality of understorey and shrub habitat in woodland may benefit Marsh Tits. These might include a reduction in active management clearance of the shrub layer, and control of deer populations which may be affecting the understorey through grazing. A minimum wood size of 0.5 hectares is believed to be required for this species (Hinsley et al. 1995), and habitat deterioration may have reduced effective habitat size.

On a wider scale, given the requirement for large territories, landscape scale management is likely to be important to maintain or restore connectivity between suitable woodlands and hence ensure that dispersing juveniles are able to connect with surrounding populations in fragmented landscapes.

Publications (3)

Temporal avoidance as a means of reducing competition between sympatric species

Author: Maziarz, M., Broughton, R.K., Beck, K.B., Robinson, R.A. & Sheldon, B.C.

Published: 2023

Human activities modify the availability of natural resources for other species, including birds, and may alter the relationships between them. The provision of supplementary food at garden feeding stations, for example, might favour some species over others and change the competitive balance between them. This paper investigates the behavioural responses to competition of the Marsh Tit, a species that is subordinate to both the Blue Tit and the Great Tit.

24.05.23

Papers

View this paper online

A method to evaluate the combined effect of tree species composition and woodland structure on indicator birds

Author: Dondina, O., Orioli. V., Massimino, D., Pinoli, G. & Bani, L.

Published: 2015

Providing quantitative management guidelines is essential for an effective conservation of forest-dependent animal communities. Traditional forest practices at the stand scale simultaneously alter both physical and floristic features with a negative effect on ecosystem processes. Thus, we tested and proposed a method to define forestry prescriptions taking into account the combined effect of woodland structure and tree species composition on the presence of four bird indicator species (Marsh Tit Poecile palustris, European Nuthatch Sitta europaea, Short-toed Tree-creeper Certhya brachydactyla and Blue Tit Cyanistes caeruleus). The study was carried out in Lombardy (Northern Italy), from 2002 to 2005. By using a stratified cluster sampling design, we recorded Basal Area, one hundred tree trunk diameters at breast height (DBH) and tree species in 160 sampling plots, grouped in 23 sampling areas. In each plot we also performed a bird survey using the point count method. We analyzed data using Multimodel Inference and Model Averaging on Generalized Linear Mixed Models, with species presence/absence as the response variable, sampling area as a random factor and forest covariates as fixed factors. In order to test our method, we compared it with other two traditional approaches, which consider structural and tree floristic variables separately. Model comparison showed that our method performed better than traditional ones, in both the evaluation and validation processes. Based on our main results, in deciduous mixed forest where the exploitation demand is limited, we recommend maintaining at least 65 trees/ha with DBH>45cm. In particular, we advise keeping 70 trees/ha with DBH>50cm in chestnut forests and 300 trees/ha with DBH 20–30cm in oak forests. Conversely, in more exploited oak forests, we advise maintaining at least 670 trees/ha with DBH 15–30cm in chestnut forests and 100 trees/ha with DBH 10–15cm.

01.04.15

Papers

Morphology, geographical variation and the subspecies of Marsh Tit Poecile palustris in Britain and Central Europe

Author: Broughton, R.K., Burgess, M.D., Dadam, D, Hebda, G., Bellamy, P.E. & Hinsley, S.A.

Published: 2016

Tit taxonomy is complex, with several species and subspecies reclassified many times since they were first formally described. This paper uses data collected during ringing to examine subspecies in Marsh Tits, with conservation implications for this declining species.

31.03.16

Papers Bird Study

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