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  2. Key features to look out for. Males have a blue-grey back, and orangey-brown bars on their underparts. Females and juveniles have a brown-grey back, and pale underparts with brown barring. Females are much bigger than males. Both have striking yellow eyes and long, thin yellow legs.

  3. What Does A Sparrowhawk Look Like & What’s Their Wingspan? Sparrowhawks are compact birds of prey with distinctive physical traits. When you observe a Sparrowhawk, you’ll notice their yellow to orange eyes , providing a sharp contrast to their plumage.

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  4. What do sparrowhawks look like? Sparrowhawks are small birds of prey with strikingly bright-yellow eyes, broad wings and yellow legs with long talons. Males are smaller than females with grey upper parts, a streaked orange-brown front and a slate-grey head on top with an orange-brown face.

    • What does a sparrowhawk look like?1
    • What does a sparrowhawk look like?2
    • What does a sparrowhawk look like?3
    • What does a sparrowhawk look like?4
    • What does a sparrowhawk look like?5
  5. What Does A Sparrowhawk Look Like? Sparrowhawks are fairly small, usually measuring between 28 – 38 cm in length. They have striking, bright yellow eyes, yellow legs, long talons and a large wingspan, usually between 55 – 70 cm. Males have grey upper parts with an orange and brown-streaked front and a grey head with an orange-brown face.

  6. What do sparrowhawks look like? Male sparrowhawks have blue-grey upperparts and white underparts that are striped with reddish-brown. They are greyer on the breast and belly.

  7. How to identify. The sparrowhawk has rounded wings and a relatively long, narrow tail. Males are small with a blue-grey back and white underparts showing reddish-orange barring. Females are much larger, with browner plumage above and grey bars below. They both have reddish cheeks.

  8. This fierce bird of prey is a woodland species, but will come into close contact with people when it visits garden bird feeders for an easy meal. Sparrowhawks are widespread across Britain and Ireland, with a population that has completely recovered from a deep decline caused by the use of organochlorine pesticides in the 1950s and 1960s.