Little Bitterns were once widespread in Central Europe. In the meantime it is a poorly distributed breeding bird of the lowlands, sporadically up to low mountain ranges. It occurs from Europe (without regular breeding in Great Britain, Ireland or Scandinavia) to West Siberia up to 56° N. It also occurs in North Africa and southern Iran and south of the Sahara to southern Africa. Isolated populations also exist in Madagascar and Australia. The total population of Europe is about 60,000-120,000 breeding pairs, with occurrences of> 5000 breeding pairs in Russia, Ukraine, Romania and Turkey. In Central Europe (around 2000) about 5300-7800 pairs are breeding, most of it in Hungary. The formerly large population in Germany has decreased to just over 100 breeding pairs. However, inventory information is particularly unreliable for this very secret species. The little bittern is one of the species to which the
Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds applies. Ixobrychus minutus MHNT.ZOO.2010.11.49.1.jpg|Eggs at the
Museum of Toulouse File:Little_bittern_(Ixobrychus_minutus).JPG |With a frog in the Aldomirovtsi Marsh, Bulgaria File:Ixobrychus minutus NRM.jpg|An adult during
ringing in Northern Italy ==References==