Great Crested Grebe

Great Crested Grebe

Podiceps cristatus
Great Crested Grebe, Chris Knights

Introduction

The Great Crested Grebe is a graceful waterbird with ornate head plumage and a dance-like courtship display.

Uniquely suited for life on the water, the Great Crested Grebe has legs placed far back on its body, which makes it clumsy on land. In summer, birds primarily inhabit reed-bordered lakes, where they eat fish and aquatic invertebrates. They can be found offshore in the winter months, when their drabber plumage and long neck means they can be confused with divers and other grebe species.

Historically persecuted for its beautiful feathers, the Great Crested Grebe population was once reduced to as few as 32 known pairs in England. Numbers increased from the mid-19th century up until 1996, after which little evidence of population change has been detected.

  • Our Trends Explorer gives you the latest insight into how this species' population is changing.
Great Crested Grebe, Chris Knights

Key Stats

Status
Common
Common
Eggs
Eggs
3-4
BTO Records
BTO Records
920k records
Population and distribution stats for:
Population Change
Population Change
Stable 1995 to 2023
Population Size
Population Size
4,900 pairs
Distribution Change
Distribution_change
28.5% expansion
Population Change
Population Change
23% decrease 1997 to 2022
Distribution Change
Distribution_change
20.8% expansion

Identification

Curated resources to aid in the identification of Great Crested Grebe

ID Videos

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

Winter Grebes

Songs and Calls

Listen to example recordings of the main vocalisations of Great Crested Grebe, provided by xeno-canto contributors.

Call:

Begging call:

Movement

Information about Great Crested Grebe 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.

The Eurasian-African Migration Atlas shows movements of individual birds ringed or recovered in Europe. See maps for this species here.

Biology

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

Productivity and Nesting

Nesting timing

Typical (exceptional) number of broods
1(2)

Egg measurements

Typical length x width
56x37 mm
Mass (% shell)
39.5g (9%)

Clutch Size

Typical number
3-4 eggs
Observed minimum and maximum
1-9 eggs

Incubation

Incubation by
Male + Female
Typical duration
27-29 days

Fledging

Type of chick
Precocial, downy
Typical duration
71-79 days
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
with breeding typically at 2 years
Maximum age from a ringed bird
11 years, 10 months, 5 days (set in 1978)
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.
All adults
190.7±8.5 mm
(180-202 mm, N=21)
Visit our Trends Explorer for trend graphs and country statistics.

Ring Size

G or H*

Classification, names and codes

Taxonomy, names and species codes for Great Crested Grebe

Classification and Codes

  • Order: Podicipediformes
  • Family: Podicipedidae
  • Scientific name: Podiceps cristatus
  • Authority: Linnaeus, 1758
  • BTO 2-letter code: GG
  • BTO 5-letter code: GRCGR
  • Euring code number: 90

Alternate species names

  • Catalan: cabussó emplomallat
  • Czech: potápka rohác
  • Danish: Toppet Lappedykker
  • Dutch: Fuut
  • Estonian: tuttpütt
  • Finnish: silkkiuikku
  • French: Grèbe huppé
  • Gaelic: Gobhlachan-mòr
  • German: Haubentaucher
  • Hungarian: búbos vöcsök
  • Icelandic: Toppgoði
  • Irish: Foitheach Mór
  • Italian: Svasso maggiore
  • Latvian: cekuldukuris
  • Lithuanian: ausuotasis kragas
  • Norwegian: Toppdykker
  • Polish: perkoz dwuczuby
  • Portuguese: mergulhão-de-poupa
  • Slovak: potápka chochlatá
  • Slovenian: copasti ponirek
  • Spanish: Somormujo lavanco
  • Swedish: skäggdopping
  • Welsh: Gwyach Fawr Gopog
  • English folkname(s): Satin Bird, Gaunt

Research

Interpretation and scientific publications about Great Crested Grebe from BTO scientists.

Causes of Change and Solutions

Causes of change

There is little good evidence available regarding the drivers of the breeding population change in this species in the UK.

Further information on causes of change

No further information available.

Information about conservation actions

The Great Crested Grebe successfully recovered after being subject to persecution in Victorian times, and BBS results indicate that numbers have been stable since at least 1994; hence this is not a species of conservation concern and specific conservation action to benefit this species is not currently required. Great Crested Grebes prefer mesotrophic to eutrophic conditions and hence may currently be benefiting from nutrient inputs from agriculture (provided conditions do not become hypertrophic), although any benefit is likely to be at the expense of other waterbirds and other taxa which are negatively affected by eutrophication (Keller & Korner-Nievergelt 2019). The continuation of local management actions and wider policies to maintain and create good quality wetland habitats for other wildfowl species are likely to continue to benefit this species.

Publications (1)

The risk of extinction for birds in Great Britain

Author: Stanbury, A., Brown, A., Eaton, M., Aebischer, N., Gillings, S., Hearn, R., Noble, D., Stroud, D. & Gregory, R.

Published: 2017

The UK has lost seven species of breeding birds in the last 200 years. Conservation efforts to prevent this from happening to other species, both in the UK and around the world, are guided by species’ priorities lists, which are often informed by data on range, population size and the degree of decline or increase in numbers. These are the sorts of data that BTO collects through its core surveys. For most taxonomic groups the priority list is provided by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) – the IUCN Red List comprises roughly 12,000 species worldwide and their conservation status. However, for birds in the UK, most policy makers refer to the Birds of Conservation Concern (BoCC) list, updated every six years (most recently in 2015). A new study funded by the RSPB and Natural England in cooperation with BTO, WWT, JNCC, and Game & Wildlife Trust has carried out the first IUCN assessment for birds in Great Britain. The study applied the IUCN criteria to existing bird population data obtained from datasets like the BTO/JNCC/RSPB Breeding Bird Survey (BBS). The criteria take into account various factors, most notably any reduction in the size (both in abundance and range) of populations, loss of habitats key to the species, small or vulnerable population sizes, and extinction risk. Alongside this, the criteria look to see if there is a “rescue” effect – such as immigration from neighbouring populations that might boost the population’s numbers, reducing the risk of extinction. The species are then categorised into one of the threat levels below. The results of the new study show that a concerning 43% of regularly occurring species in Great Britain are classed as Threatened, with another 10% classified as Near Threatened. Twenty-three breeding or non-breeding populations of birds were classed as Critically Endangered, including Fieldfare and Golden Oriole (both possibly extinct as breeders), Whimbrel, Turtle Dove, Arctic Skua and Kittiwake, as well as non-breeding populations of Bewick’s Swan, White-fronted Goose and Smew., Over the past 200 years, seven species have gone extinct as breeders in Britain, including Serin, Temminck’s Stint and Wryneck in the past 25 years. The total percentage of threatened birds in Great Britain (43%) is high compared to that seen elsewhere in Europe (13%). Reasons for this are not entirely clear, although it may be that Britain’s island status has something to do with this, as there are fewer neighbouring “rescue” populations. Although the results from the IUCN assessment and BoCC assessment largely overlap, the IUCN assessment raises the level of concern for species such as Red-Breasted Merganser, Great Crested Grebe, Moorhen, Red-Billed Chough (all classed as Vulnerable), and Greenfinch (Endangered). These species might thus warrant closer monitoring in the near future. In contrast, the BoCC assessment identifies a number of species of concern whose declines have been more gradual but over long time periods (e.g. Skylark and House Sparrow). The authors emphasise that this assessment is not a replacement of the BoCC report, but rather that the two reports complement each other. With this new wealth of knowledge, there will hopefully be even more support for those species that need it most.

01.09.17

Papers

More Evidence

More evidence from Conservation Evidence.com

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