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Birdโœ“ Protected species

Magpie / Crow

Pica pica / Corvus corone

โœ“What to do NOW

  1. 1Cover with a towel and pick up restraining the wings along the body
  2. 2Watch out for the beak โ€” corvids have a strong, precise bite
  3. 3Place in a ventilated dark box
  4. 4Check for wounds, leg or wing fractures
  5. 5Contact the CRAS โ€” corvids rehabilitate well but require specific care

โœ—NEVER do this

  • โœ—Do not attempt to hand-rear corvid chicks (imprinting is difficult to manage)
  • โœ—Do not release too early โ€” they need behavioural rehabilitation
  • โœ—Do not keep in a small cage for long โ€” they are intelligent animals and stress easily

โš  Important note

Magpies and crows are among the most intelligent birds in Europe. Chicks fallen from the nest (recognisable by incomplete feathers) must be taken to the CRAS immediately โ€” human imprinting at this stage makes re-wilding very difficult. Adult corvids often fully rehabilitate even from serious trauma.

โš– Legal protection

Protected by Law 157/1992. The jackdaw (Corvus monedula) is listed in Annex I of the Birds Directive.

Also known as

eurasian magpiehooded crowcarrion crowjackdawjayravenrook

Did you find a magpie / crow right now?

๐Ÿ†˜ Find the nearest rescue centre โ†’