The exhibition shows the extraordinary wealth of bird species found in our country. They have been divided according to the environments in which they live. There are forest, grassland, aquatic and wetland birds. Interesting, often rare species are presented in each group. For example, there are ruffs, each male of which is coloured slightly differently, a beautiful purple heron, a helmeted duck - a duck with a peak of feathers like a helmet on its head or a black-winged warbler and, finally, the magnificent drop - one of the heaviest flying birds in the world, which since the mid-1980s has been seen only abroad, from where it sometimes flies to our country.
Among the more valuable birds presented here are also, for example, five species of grebes with a grebe and a barbastelle, a curlew and a bittern. Daytime birds of prey form a separate group, distinguished not by the habitat they live in, but by the way they feed. Here we can see both the common buzzard, the less numerous but also well-known hawk, and the rarer peregrine falcon or the very rare osprey.