Jack snipe

Jack snipe

Jack snipe ©John Bridges

A jack snipe lurking in the vegetation at the edge of a pool, it's stripy camouflage helping it blend in with the grasses

Jack snipe © Chris Dover

A jack snipe standing next to a common snipe in a grassy patch. The jack snipe is noticeably smaller, with a shorter beak and more heavily patterned face

Jack snipe and common snipe © Barry Trevis

Jack snipe

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Scientific name: Lymnocryptes minimus
This well-camouflaged wader is a winter visitor to the UK, where it can be seen feeding on wetlands with a distinctive bobbing motion.

Top facts

Stats

Length: 18cm
Wingspan: 40cm
Weight: 55g

Conservation status

Classified in the UK as Green under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021).

When to see

September to April

About

The jack snipe is a small wading bird, similar to the more familiar common snipe. Unlike their common cousins, jack snipe are just winter visitors to the UK, spending the summer breeding on waterlogged bogs in northern Europe.

Jack snipe are secretive birds, often hidden in thick vegetation on marshes, wet grassland and in reedbeds. They use their long bill to probe the mud for insects, worms and even plant material, moving in a slight crouch and constantly bouncing up and down as if their legs were made of springs.

What to look for

A small wader, about two thirds the size of a common snipe, which it resembles in plumage. The upperparts are brown with golden stripes, the belly is white and the breast is buff with thin dark streaks.

Compared to a common snipe, the bill is much shorter with a relatively deeper base, and the top of the head is all dark, lacking the golden crown stripe. Also, the pale band above the eye (the supercilium) is split in two by a thin dark line, which looks a little like an eyebrow. The ‘bouncing’ feeding action is often distinctive, though common snipe will sometimes bob slightly as well.

Jack snipe are reluctant to fly from cover, preferring to hunker down and trust to their impressive camouflage. They will only flush when almost trodden on, usually only flying a short distance before dropping back into cover. Common snipe tend to flush much earlier, calling as they take to the air and then flying high and zigzagging erratically.

Where to find

Jack snipe can be found across the UK in winter, absent only from the uplands. They favour marshes, wet grasslands and the muddy fringes of reedbeds.

Did you know?

The jack snipe’s secretive nature is reflected in its scientific name. Lymnocryptes is derived from the Greek words limne, meaning marsh, and krupto, meaning to hide. The species name minimus is Latin for smallest.

Watch

Jack Snipe by Tom Hibbert

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