Forest birds breed, migrate, or otherwise depend on forests for their life cycle. These species include a wide variety of birds:
Many species winter or rest in forests during spring and autumn migration.
Although most of the forests in one way or another are changed by people, the vast majority are still untouched in nature. This allowed the birds to return to their favorite places of reproduction every summer, preserved biodiversity. Some species rely solely on forests as a habitat.
Brownheaded nut
Blackheaded nut
The whitezone thrush
Drozd-white carrier
Singing thrush
Big tit
Charp tit
Big motley woodpecker
Small motley woodpecker
Average motley woodpecker
Grayhaired woodpecker
Black woodpecker
Threefingered woodpecker
Woodcock
Sparrow Sychik
Longtailed owl
Yellowheaded korolek
Green woodpecker
The rest of the forest birds
Cedar
Clest-tank
Red kite
Black kite
Blue tit
lesser spotted eagle
Moskovka
Rough-legged Owl
Pied flycatcher
common redstart
common robin
common pika
common jay
common tap dance
common buzzard
common wren
Common honey buzzard
common nuthatch
waxwing
common bullfinch
Ratchet warbler
Light-bellied warbler
Grouse
tawny owl
garden warbler
Blackhead coinage
Chizh
reel
Sparrowhawk
goshawk
Dubonos
blue grouse
Oriole
Finch
Robin
Magpie
Cuckoo
common raven
Conclusion
With almost two-thirds of bird species found in forests, logging is a huge problem for birds. Many of these species will not survive outside forests and will not migrate between remaining forests. Logging driven by global demand for timber, paper and land for cash crops and biofuels.
Birds in the forests suffer from wild domestic predators cats. Forest summer fires destroy nesting sites and offspring of forest birds that breed at this time of year. Climate change also affects the abundance of forest species. Forests either rot from the rains or dry up due to lack of moisture.