This list includes 97 Birds that start with S, from “Barn Swallow” to “White Stork”. These species cover a wide mix of forms and sizes, from small passerines to large waders. Use this list as a quick reference for birdwatching, classroom work, or building field checklists.

Birds that start with S are bird species whose common English names begin with the letter “S”. Many of these names—like “Swan” and “Sparrow”—carry strong cultural or literary associations around the world.

Below you’ll find the table with Common name, Scientific name (binomial), Habitat, and Wingspan (cm).

Common name: The familiar English name you will search for and spot in field guides or checklists, useful for quick recognition.

Scientific name (binomial): The two-part Latin name that uniquely identifies each species, helping you confirm which bird the common name refers to.

Habitat: A concise category (forest, wetland, grassland, coastal, urban, etc.) that tells you where you are most likely to find the species.

Wingspan (cm): Typical wingspan range in centimeters so you can judge size at a glance when observing birds in the field.

Methodology: Names use common English forms with accepted scientific names, and habitat and wingspan indicate typical, documented information for quick use.

Birds that start with S

Common NameScientific NameWingspan (cm)Habitat
Sabine’s GullXema sabini81–87Arctic coasts and open ocean
Saddle-billed StorkEphippiorhynchus senegalensis240–270African wetlands and rivers
Saffron FinchSicalis flaveola21–24Open and semi-open lowlands, urban areas
Greater Sage-GrouseCentrocercus urophasianus65–75Sagebrush steppe in western North America
Sage ThrasherOreoscoptes montanus28–30Sagebrush country in western North America
SanderlingCalidris alba36–41Sandy beaches and tidal flats worldwide
Sandhill CraneAntigone canadensis180–220Wetlands, prairies, and agricultural fields
Sand MartinRiparia riparia27–29Near water, nesting in sandy banks
São Tomé GrosbeakCrithagra concolor35–38Primary forest on São Tomé island
Sardinian WarblerSylvia melanocephala15–19Scrubland and maquis in the Mediterranean
Savannah SparrowPasserculus sandwichensis20–24Grasslands, fields, and coastal marshes
Savanna HawkButeogallus meridionalis121–140Open savanna and wetlands in the Americas
Scale-crested Pygmy TyrantLophotriccus pileatus12–14Humid montane forest undergrowth
Scaly-breasted MuniaLonchura punctulata14–16Grassland, scrub, and gardens
Scarlet-chested SunbirdChalcomitra senegalensis16–18Savanna, woodlands, and gardens in Africa
Scarlet IbisEudocimus ruber55–63Coastal mudflats, mangroves, and wetlands
Scarlet MacawAra macao110–120Humid evergreen forests, often near rivers
Scarlet TanagerPiranga olivacea28–30Deciduous forests of eastern North America
Streak-breasted Scimitar BabblerPomatorhinus ruficollis20–22Forest and scrub undergrowth in Asia
Eurasian Scops OwlOtus scops47–54Woodlands, parks, and gardens
Screaming PihaLipaugus vociferans35–40Amazonian rainforest canopy
Noisy ScrubbirdAtrichornis clamosus20–23Dense coastal heath and scrub in SW Australia
SecretarybirdSagittarius serpentarius190–220African savannas and grasslands
Sedge WarblerAcrocephalus schoenobaenus17–21Reedbeds and wetlands
Semi-palmated PloverCharadrius semipalmatus47–50Beaches, mudflats, and tundra
Semi-palmated SandpiperCalidris pusilla29–33Tundra, mudflats, and shorelines
European SerinSerinus serinus20–23Open woodland, parks, and gardens
European ShagGulosus aristotelis90–105Coastal cliffs and rocky shores
Sharp-shinned HawkAccipiter striatus51–69Forests and woodlands across the Americas
Snowy SheathbillChionis albus75–80Antarctic and subantarctic coastlines
ShoebillBalaeniceps rex230–260Freshwater swamps in tropical east Africa
Short-eared OwlAsio flammeus95–110Open country, grasslands, and marshes
Northern ShovelerSpatula clypeata70–85Shallow wetlands and marshes
Loggerhead ShrikeLanius ludovicianus30–33Open country with scattered shrubs or trees
Siberian AccentorPrunella montanella21–23Siberian taiga, thickets, and undergrowth
Siberian JayPerisoreus infaustus45–50Boreal coniferous forests (taiga)
Siberian RubythroatCalliope calliope22–25Mixed coniferous forest and scrub in Siberia
Silver-breasted BroadbillSerilophus lunatus18–20Montane and broadleaf evergreen forests
Silvery-cheeked HornbillBycanistes brevis110–125Forests of East Africa
Eurasian SiskinSpinus spinus20–23Coniferous and mixed woodlands
Great SkuaStercorarius skua125–140Oceanic, breeding on northern coastal tundra
Eurasian SkylarkAlauda arvensis30–36Farmland, heathland, and open country
Slaty-backed GullLarus schistisagus132–148North Pacific coasts and seas
Slender-billed CurlewNumenius tenuirostris80–90Marshes, steppes (historically)
SmewMergellus albellus55–65Boreal lakes and rivers
Snail KiteRostrhamus sociabilis99–105Freshwater marshes in the Americas
Common SnipeGallinago gallinago39–45Marshes, bogs, and wet meadows
Snow BuntingPlectrophenax nivalis32–38Arctic tundra, alpine zones, and winter coasts
Snow GooseAnser caerulescens135–165Arctic tundra, wintering in fields and marshes
Snowy EgretEgretta thula100–105Wetlands, marshes, and coastal estuaries
Snowy OwlBubo scandiacus125–150Arctic tundra
Snowy PloverCharadrius nivosus40–44Sandy beaches, dunes, and salt flats
Social FlycatcherMyiozetetes similis22–25Open woodland, plantations, and gardens
Solitary SandpiperTringa solitaria55–60Boreal forest ponds, wintering in freshwater habitats
Somali OstrichStruthio molybdophanes190–210Savanna and woodland in the Horn of Africa
Song SparrowMelospiza melodia18–22Shrublands, suburbs, and marshes
Song ThrushTurdus philomelos33–36Woodlands, parks, and gardens
Sooty ShearwaterArdenna grisea94–109Oceans worldwide, breeding on southern islands
Sooty TernOnychoprion fuscatus82–94Tropical and subtropical oceans
SoraPorzana carolina32–39Freshwater marshes across North America
Spanish Imperial EagleAquila adalberti180–220Mediterranean woodland and marshlands
Eurasian SparrowhawkAccipiter nisus55–70Woodlands, parks, and gardens
Spectacled EiderSomateria fischeri85–95Arctic coasts of Alaska and Siberia
Spix’s MacawCyanopsitta spixii55–60Caatinga woodland in Brazil (historically)
Splendid FairywrenMalurus splendens15–16Arid and semi-arid scrubland in Australia
Spoon-billed SandpiperCalidris pygmaea28–32Arctic coastal tundra, wintering in Asia
Roseate SpoonbillPlatalea ajaja120–130Coastal marshes, lagoons, and mangroves
Spotted CrakePorzana porzana32–38Fens, marshes, and wet meadows in Eurasia
Spotted DoveSpilopelia chinensis43–48Open woodland, farmland, and urban areas
Spotted FlycatcherMuscicapa striata23–25Open woodland, parks, and large gardens
Spotted OwletAthene brama45–50Open habitats and human settlements in Asia
Spotted RedshankTringa erythropus61–67Boreal bogs and marshes, wintering on estuaries
Spotted TowheePipilo maculatus25–30Shrublands and forest edges in western North America
Spruce GrouseCanachites canadensis55–60Boreal coniferous forests
Squacco HeronArdeola ralloides44–47Reed beds and marshes
Common StarlingSturnus vulgaris37–42Ubiquitous in urban, suburban, and rural areas
Steller’s JayCyanocitta stelleri40–44Coniferous and mixed forests in western North America
Steller’s Sea EagleHaliaeetus pelagicus195–250Coastal and riverine habitats in northeast Asia
Black-necked StiltHimantopus mexicanus68–75Shallow wetlands and mudflats
Eurasian Stone-curlewBurhinus oedicnemus77–85Dry open grasslands, heath, and semi-deserts
European StonechatSaxicola rubicola18–21Heathland, coastal cliffs, and rough grassland
White StorkCiconia ciconia155–215Open farmland, wetlands, and near human settlements
European Storm PetrelHydrobates pelagicus35–40Pelagic, breeding on remote offshore islands
Sulphur-crested CockatooCacatua galerita80–100Woodlands, forests, and urban areas in Australia
Summer TanagerPiranga rubra28–30Open deciduous and pine-oak woodlands
SunbitternEurypyga helias50–60Forested streams and rivers in the Neotropics
Purple SunbirdCinnyris asiaticus14–15Gardens, cultivated areas, and light forest
Surf ScoterMelanitta perspicillata75–85Coastal waters, breeding on northern lakes
Swainson’s HawkButeo swainsoni120–137Open country of western North America
Swainson’s ThrushCatharus ustulatus29–32Coniferous and mixed forests
Barn SwallowHirundo rustica32–35Ubiquitous near human structures and open country
Swallow-tailed KiteElanoides forficatus112–136Wooded wetlands and riverine forests
Swamp SparrowMelospiza georgiana18–20Freshwater marshes and swamps
Mute SwanCygnus olor200–240Ponds, lakes, rivers, and coastal bays
Common SwiftApus apus42–48Aerial, nests in crevices in buildings and cliffs
Sword-billed HummingbirdEnsifera ensifera18–20Andean cloud forests
Syrian WoodpeckerDendrocopos syriacus34–39Open woodlands, parks, and agricultural areas

Descriptions

Sabine’s Gull
A small, striking gull with a forked tail and unique wing pattern, breeding in the high Arctic and wintering at sea.
Saddle-billed Stork
A huge, colorful stork of sub-Saharan Africa, named for the yellow “saddle” on its massive red and black bill.
Saffron Finch
A common, bright yellow tanager of South America, often kept as a cage bird and introduced to other regions.
Greater Sage-Grouse
North America’s largest grouse, famous for the male’s elaborate strutting display at communal leks, inflating large yellow air sacs on its chest.
Sage Thrasher
A skilled mimic with a long, melodious song, this thrasher is a characteristic bird of arid western shrublands.
Sanderling
A small, pale sandpiper famous for chasing waves up and down sandy beaches, appearing to run on clockwork legs.
Sandhill Crane
A large, ancient crane species known for its loud, bugling calls and elaborate dancing rituals during courtship. Widespread in North America.
Sand Martin
Known as the Bank Swallow in North America, this small hirundine nests in colonies, burrowing tunnels into vertical sand or dirt banks.
São Tomé Grosbeak
One of the world’s rarest birds, this large, dull-colored finch was rediscovered in 1991 after being thought extinct for over a century.
Sardinian Warbler
A common and conspicuous warbler of the Mediterranean basin, with a distinctive black head, white throat, and bright red eye-ring.
Savannah Sparrow
A widespread and geographically variable sparrow across North America, recognized by its notched tail and often a yellowish spot before the eye.
Savanna Hawk
A long-legged hawk often seen walking on the ground in open country, hunting for insects, rodents, and reptiles.
Scale-crested Pygmy Tyrant
A tiny, active flycatcher of the Andes, named for the scaly-looking, erectile crest that is often difficult to see.
Scaly-breasted Munia
A small finch with a distinctive scaly pattern on its breast and belly. Native to Asia, it is a popular cage bird introduced elsewhere.
Scarlet-chested Sunbird
A common African sunbird where the male has an iridescent green head and a striking scarlet chest panel against its dark body.
Scarlet Ibis
A spectacularly vibrant wading bird from South America, gaining its brilliant scarlet plumage from pigments in the crustaceans it eats.
Scarlet Macaw
One of the most famous and colorful parrots in the world, known for its intelligence, long life, and strong pair bonds.
Scarlet Tanager
A stunning songbird; breeding males are brilliant red with black wings, while females are olive-yellow. They migrate to South America for winter.
Streak-breasted Scimitar Babbler
A sociable and noisy bird with a long, downward-curving bill, often found foraging in small groups on the forest floor.
Eurasian Scops Owl
A small, migratory owl with excellent camouflage that mimics tree bark. Its call is a monotonous, whistling “kyew”.
Screaming Piha
A dull-colored bird with one of the loudest calls in the world, a three-part whistle that sounds like “scream-ing-pi-ha”.
Noisy Scrubbird
A critically rare and secretive ground-dwelling bird, one of Australia’s rarest. The male has an astonishingly powerful and explosive song.
Secretarybird
A unique, terrestrial bird of prey that hunts snakes and other reptiles on foot, stomping them with its long, powerful legs.
Sedge Warbler
A small, migratory warbler with a complex, chattering song that often incorporates mimicry of other bird species.
Semi-palmated Plover
A small shorebird with a single dark neck band, named for the partial webbing between its toes. A common sight on American coastlines.
Semi-palmated Sandpiper
One of the most abundant shorebirds in the Americas, this tiny sandpiper undertakes a remarkable long-distance migration from the Arctic to South America.
European Serin
A small, yellow finch related to the canary. Its song is a fast, high-pitched, jangling trill, often delivered from a treetop.
European Shag
A seabird similar to a cormorant but more slender and with a greenish gloss to its plumage. It sports a jaunty crest in the breeding season.
Sharp-shinned Hawk
A small, agile hawk that specializes in hunting songbirds, navigating dense woods with incredible speed and precision.
Snowy Sheathbill
The only land bird native to the Antarctic continent. It is an opportunistic scavenger, often stealing food from penguins.
Shoebill
An unmistakable, massive bird with a prehistoric look, named for its enormous, shoe-shaped bill. It hunts lungfish in dense swamps.
Short-eared Owl
A medium-sized owl often seen hunting during the day, flying with floppy, moth-like wingbeats over open fields.
Northern Shoveler
A dabbling duck easily identified by its huge, spatulate bill, which it uses to filter small invertebrates from the water’s surface.
Loggerhead Shrike
A predatory songbird known as the “butcher bird” for its habit of impaling prey (insects, lizards, mice) on thorns or barbed wire.
Siberian Accentor
A small, secretive passerine with a striking face pattern of a black crown and a broad, buff-colored supercilium.
Siberian Jay
A sociable and curious member of the crow family, known for its fearlessness and habit of storing food for the winter.
Siberian Rubythroat
A small migratory chat, the male of which possesses a stunningly bright red throat patch, which it flashes during song.
Silver-breasted Broadbill
A striking bird of Southeast Asia and the Himalayas, with a bright blue bill, black-and-white wing markings, and a sociable nature.
Silvery-cheeked Hornbill
A large, noisy hornbill with a massive casque on its bill. They are important seed dispersers in their forest habitat.
Eurasian Siskin
A small, acrobatic finch with yellow-green plumage. It often hangs upside down to feed on seeds, especially from alder and birch trees.
Great Skua
A powerful, aggressive seabird often called the “pirate of the seas” for its kleptoparasitic behavior of stealing food from other birds.
Eurasian Skylark
Famed in poetry and song, this small brown bird is known for its spectacular song-flight, where it rises vertically while delivering a continuous, warbling song.
Slaty-backed Gull
A large, powerful gull of the North Pacific, with a dark slate-grey back, pink legs, and a heavy yellow bill with a red spot.
Slender-billed Curlew
One of the world’s most mysterious and rarest birds, this curlew is critically endangered and may already be extinct, with no confirmed sightings since 2004.
Smew
A small, striking diving duck. The male is pristine white with fine black lines and a black mask, often called the “white nun”.
Snail Kite
A graceful raptor with a highly specialized, slender, hooked bill used exclusively for extracting apple snails from their shells.
Common Snipe
A secretive wader with a very long bill and cryptic plumage. Famous for its “winnowing” display flight, creating a drumming sound with its tail feathers.
Snow Bunting
A hardy finch that breeds in the high Arctic. In winter, flocks of these “snowflakes” descend south, appearing as flurries of white and brown.
Snow Goose
A North American goose with two color morphs, white and “blue.” They migrate in huge, noisy flocks that can number in the thousands.
Snowy Egret
An elegant, medium-sized heron with brilliant white plumage, a black bill, black legs, and distinctive “golden slippers” for feet.
Snowy Owl
A large, powerful white owl of the Arctic, made famous by the Harry Potter series. They are nomadic, moving south in winter in search of prey.
Snowy Plover
A tiny, pale shorebird that nests on open beaches, where its excellent camouflage helps it avoid detection. Populations are threatened by coastal development.
Social Flycatcher
A common and noisy flycatcher of Central and South America, often found in pairs or small groups, living up to its social name.
Solitary Sandpiper
Unlike most shorebirds, this species nests in old songbird nests in trees and is typically found alone during migration.
Somali Ostrich
Recognized as a distinct species from the Common Ostrich, males have distinctive blue-gray necks and legs, which become brighter during mating season.
Song Sparrow
An abundant and widespread North American sparrow, recognized by a dark central spot on its streaked breast and a rich, musical song.
Song Thrush
A familiar European thrush known for its beautiful, loud song, which consists of repeated musical phrases. It famously eats snails by smashing them on an “anvil” stone.
Sooty Shearwater
An abundant seabird that undertakes one of the longest animal migrations ever recorded, a round-trip of over 64,000 km in the Pacific Ocean.
Sooty Tern
A highly pelagic seabird that spends years at sea without landing, sleeping on the wing. They nest in huge, noisy colonies on remote islands.
Sora
A small, secretive rail, more often heard than seen. It has a distinctive descending whinny call that echoes through the marsh.
Spanish Imperial Eagle
One of the world’s rarest eagles, found only in the Iberian Peninsula. Conservation efforts have brought it back from the brink of extinction.
Eurasian Sparrowhawk
A small bird of prey, the Eurasian equivalent of the Sharp-shinned Hawk. Females are significantly larger than the males.
Spectacled Eider
A stunningly patterned sea duck, the male has a pale green head with large, white, circular “spectacles” outlined in black around the eyes.
Spix’s Macaw
A vibrant blue macaw famous for being extinct in the wild for two decades. A successful captive breeding and reintroduction program is underway.
Splendid Fairywren
The breeding male is an incredible, iridescent cobalt blue. These birds live in cooperative family groups that help raise young.
Spoon-billed Sandpiper
A critically endangered wader with a uniquely shaped bill. It is one of the rarest and most threatened birds in the world.
Roseate Spoonbill
A bizarre and beautiful wading bird of the Americas, with a pink body and a long, flattened, spoon-shaped bill used to sift for food.
Spotted Crake
A small, secretive waterbird in the rail family. Its plumage is covered in brown and buff spots, providing excellent camouflage in wetlands.
Spotted Dove
A common dove in Asia with a distinctive black-and-white checkered patch on the back of its neck. It has been widely introduced elsewhere.
Spotted Flycatcher
A rather plain, streaky brown bird that is a master of aerial hunting, sallying out from a perch to catch flying insects.
Spotted Owlet
A small, common owl in South Asia that has adapted well to living alongside humans, often nesting in buildings and old trees in villages.
Spotted Redshank
An elegant wader that undergoes a dramatic plumage change, from speckled gray in winter to sooty black in breeding season.
Spotted Towhee
A striking sparrow-like bird with a black head, red eye, and rufous flanks. It forages by noisily kicking back leaves with both feet.
Spruce Grouse
A chicken-like bird of northern forests, known for being remarkably tame. Its diet consists mainly of conifer needles.
Squacco Heron
A small, stocky heron of the Old World. It appears buff-colored at rest but flashes brilliant white wings in flight.
Common Starling
A familiar, highly social bird known for its iridescent plumage and incredible vocal mimicry. Forms huge, mesmerizing winter roosts called murmurations.
Steller’s Jay
A bold, intelligent jay with a striking black crest and deep blue body. It is the provincial bird of British Columbia, Canada.
Steller’s Sea Eagle
One of the world’s largest and most powerful eagles, with a massive yellow bill, white shoulders, and a huge wingspan.
Black-necked Stilt
An impossibly elegant shorebird with a needle-thin black bill, a black-and-white body, and incredibly long, pink legs.
Eurasian Stone-curlew
A strange, cryptically-camouflaged wader with large, yellow eyes, adapted for a nocturnal and crepuscular lifestyle. Also known as a Thick-knee.
European Stonechat
A small, perky bird, the male has a black head, white collar, and orange-red breast. It has a characteristic flicking of its wings and tail.
White Stork
A large, iconic bird of European folklore, famous for nesting on rooftops. They undertake long migrations to Africa for the winter.
European Storm Petrel
A tiny, all-dark seabird that flutters and patters across the ocean surface like a bat, feeding on small crustaceans and fish.
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
A large, intelligent, and very loud white parrot, instantly recognizable by its expressive yellow crest.
Summer Tanager
The male is the only completely red bird in North America. They have a special fondness for eating bees and wasps, which they catch in mid-air.
Sunbittern
A unique and graceful wading bird. When threatened, it flashes open its wings to reveal a spectacular sunburst pattern of orange, yellow, and black.
Purple Sunbird
A tiny, active bird from South Asia and the Middle East. The breeding male has a glossy, metallic purple-black plumage.
Surf Scoter
A North American sea duck. The male is all black except for white patches on its head, and has a large, multicolored bill.
Swainson’s Hawk
A slender buteo known for its incredibly long migration to Argentina. It often forms huge flocks and feeds heavily on insects.
Swainson’s Thrush
A common North American thrush with a beautiful, ethereal, fluting song that spirals upwards. It has a distinct buffy eye-ring.
Barn Swallow
The most widespread species of swallow in the world, recognized by its glossy blue back, long, forked tail streamers, and agile flight.
Swallow-tailed Kite
An exceptionally graceful and buoyant raptor with a deeply forked tail and striking black-and-white plumage. It rarely flaps, soaring for hours.
Swamp Sparrow
A richly-colored sparrow of North American wetlands, with a rusty cap, unstreaked gray breast, and a sweet, simple trill for a song.
Mute Swan
A large, graceful waterbird, recognized by its S-shaped neck and bright orange bill with a black basal knob. It is surprisingly aggressive.
Common Swift
A superb aerialist that spends almost its entire life in flight, even sleeping on the wing. Its screaming calls are a classic sound of summer.
Sword-billed Hummingbird
An incredible hummingbird with a bill that is longer than the rest of its body, the only bird with such a feature. It is adapted to feed on flowers with long corollas.
Syrian Woodpecker
A close relative of the Great Spotted Woodpecker, this species has expanded its range north and west across Europe from the Middle East.
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