Regardless of grade, waxwings are birds of the order Aves, family Waxwingidae. The body length is 18 cm, the wingspan is 34-35 cm, the weight is 40-64 g, and the life span is 13 years. It is a small songbird, its body is basically grape gray brown, its head is dark chestnut brown, and there is a slender, clustered feather crest on the top of its head. A black eye stripe runs from the base of the bill through the eyes to the back pillow, located on both sides of the crest. The chestnut brown head is extremely eye-catching. Chin and throat black. The wings have white wing spots, and the ends of the secondary flight feathers have red drop-shaped spots. The tail has black subterminal spots and yellow terminal spots.
The peacebird inhabits In coniferous forests, mixed coniferous and broad-leaved forests and poplar and birch forests. In addition to moving in pairs during the breeding season, they often move in groups at other times, sometimes even forming large groups of nearly a hundred individuals. It mainly feeds on plant foods such as pine, birch, rose, honeysuckle, wormwood, buckthorn and other plant fruits, seeds, and buds. With its graceful body and soft singing, it is an ornamental bird in winter gardens. Distributed in northern Europe, northern and central and eastern Asia, western Canada and the northwestern United States.