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Society & Culture3 mins ago
we got a robin in our garden ! i think it may be nesting in the conifers. im quite chuffed because i was told they are terretorial. was quoted as one bird/pair to a couple of square miles.
i know that sounds a bit excessive, but its what was quoted to me. can anyone confirm or deny this ?
ta me old fruits ! :-)
No best answer has yet been selected by funkymoped. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Your vey fortunate, I have Bluetits in the box, and if i'm doing any digging, geat a Blackbird and Robin hopping around my feet,
But as far as Robins go, yes, they are so territorial that the creature that kills the most Robins, are other Robins.
Saw a mockup on the box, where they put a dummy Robin in the territory of another, the real one, after warning it, landed on its head and literally took it to pieces.
From RSPB
Breeding territories average 0.55ha in size about six would fit onto an average sized football pitch while winter territories are around half of this. The exact size depends on the quality of habitat and the density of birds in the area. In some areas, such as Scottish pine woods with well spaced mature trees and few shrubs, breeding densities can be as low as 10 pairs/sq km, while a lowland woodland can support as many as 200-300 pairs/sq km.
Territory boundaries are fluid, and change frequently as circumstances change.