Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Raven
Corvus corax (Northern Raven)

Photo: A male raven preens in the warm spring sunshine
A male raven preens in the warm spring sunshine.
Photograph by Michael S. Quinton

Raven Profile

Common ravens are actually rather remarkable animals. These sleek, black birds are excellent and acrobatic fliers on par with falcons and hawks. Such aerial skills are on display during breeding season, when exciting mating rituals include an elaborate dance of chases, dives, and rolls.

These intelligent birds were honored by Native Americans and often portrayed as sly pranksters for their playful nature.

Known as scavengers, ravens are also effective hunters that sometimes use cooperative techniques. Teams of ravens have been known to hunt down game too large for a single bird. They also prey on eggs and nestlings of other birds, such as coastal seabirds, as well as rodents, grains, worms, and insects. Ravens do dine on carrion and sometimes on human garbage.

In winter, common ravens may gather in flocks to forage during the day and to roost at night. During the rest of the year, they are often coupled, or in small groups. Ravens are believed to mate for life. They build large, stick nests in which females lay three to seven eggs each spring. Both parents care for their young, which remain dependent for several months.

Common ravens typically vocalize with a croaking sound, but they boast a wider repertoire of calls.

Ravens are the largest passerine (perching) birds in North America. They were once exterminated as pests thought to constitute a threat to game birds and domestic animals. Today, populations are expanding, and the birds are a familiar sight across the Northern Hemisphere from the icy Arctic to the Mediterranean and in urban areas as well.

Fast Facts

Type: Bird
Diet: Omnivore
Average lifespan in the wild: 13 years
Size: 24 to 26 in (61 to 66 cm); Wingspan, 3.8 to 4.7 ft (1.2 to 1.4 m)
Weight: 2.3 lbs (1.3 kg)
Group name: Flock
Did you know? According to legend, if the ravens leave the Tower of London, the fortress and the British kingdom will fall.
Size relative to a tea cup:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Bird Features

Photo: Snowy owl

Muscle and Magic

Visit frigid Barrow, Alaska, and see snowy owls in their only natural breeding ground in the United States in this multimedia feature.

Photo: Gray owl

Winged Silence

Learn about great gray owls, lords of the northern forests, in this feature.

Photo: Bald eagle

Back from the Brink

Learn about the amazing comeback of the American bald eagle in this multimedia feature.

Other Birds of Legend

Map: Locator map for the raven
 Raven range

Special Advertising Sections

Photo: Pur water bottles

Interactive Quiz

Test your knowledge! See how much you know about the world's water resources.

Photo: Sand dunes

Professional Techniques

Learn tips from a NatGeo photographer to snap great photos.

Birds Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines - Birds

Photo: Macaw

Make us your online news source.

Get Bird Pictures

Photo: Hornbill

Get your daily dose of photos.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Birding Essentials

Photo: Great Egret

Get guides, feeders, cameras, and more.

Six Degrees Book and DVD

Image: Six Degrees DVD and book

Get an eye-opening warning of the dangers of climate change, one degree at a time.