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Birdman Mel's Backyard Tips
Overview
Curlew Sandpiper: Medium-sized sandpiper with mottled rufous, white, and black upperparts. Head, neck and breast are a rich rufous while vent, undertail coverts and underwings are white. Black bill is long and slightly decurved. The legs and feet are black. Swift direct flight with rapid wing beats.
Range and Habitat
Curlew Sandpiper: Breeds in Eurasia and very rarely in northern Alaska. Rare but regular migrant to the east coast, less common on west coast; spends winters mainly in the Old World. Nests on tundra; in migration stays on estuaries, lagoons, and lakes.
Topo Map:
Sandpiper-like Body
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"chirrup", "chirrip", "wick-wick-wick"
Interesting Facts
The Curlew Sandpiper, although breeding in northern Asia, seems to stray to many parts of the world outside of its normal haunts.
The numbers of this species (and of Little Stint) depend on the population of lemmings. In poor lemming years, predatory species such as skuas and Snowy Owls will take Arctic-breeding waders instead.
This species occasionally hybridizes with the Sharp-tailed Sandpiper and the Pectoral Sandpiper, producing the presumed "species" called "Cooper's Sandpiper" and "Cox's Sandpiper."
A group of sandpipers has many collective nouns, including a "bind", "contradiction", "fling", "hill", and "time-step" of sandpipers.
Bird Term Glossary
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Western Sandpiper
Dunlin
Stilt Sandpiper
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Red Knot
Red-necked Phalarope
Wilson's Phalarope
.