Pin-tailed Snipe
Pin-tailed Snipe: Large, chunky, cryptically colored shorebird. Upperparts complexly mottled tan, brown, and black. Tail rufous. Long gray-green bill, dark brown tip. Legs, feet are gray-green. Feeds on insects, larvae, worms, seeds. Flushes in a zigzag pattern. Direct flight with rapid wing beats.
● Song:
"scaap"
● Foraging & Feeding:
Pin-tailed Snipe: Probes in soft mud or ground with very long bill in wet meadows and shorelines. Eats mollusks, earthworms, and insect larvae.
● Breeding & nesting:
Pin-tailed Snipe: Four green yellow eggs with brown splotches are laid in a shallow depression on the ground well concealed by vegetation. Eggs incubated 20 days, presumably by female alone. Chicks independent in two months.
● Similar species:
Pin-tailed Snipe: Common and Wilson's snipes have longer tails that can be seen on perched birds. In flight their longer tail mostly hides their feet. Perched birds don't show the strongly barred secondary coverts of the Pin-tailed Snipe.