Curlew Sandpiper
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.
● Song:
"chirrup", "chirrip", "wick-wick-wick"
● Foraging & Feeding:
Curlew Sandpiper: Diet consists of snails, worms, and insects. Forages by probing mud rapidly with its bill, usually working away from others; wades to belly-deep.
● Breeding & nesting:
Curlew Sandpiper: Four cream, yellow, or olive eggs spotted with brown and black are laid in a ground depression on tundra. Eggs are incubated for 21 days by the female.
● Similar species:
Curlew Sandpiper: Rufous plumage is diagnostic. Dunlin has a decurved bill but lacks white rump. Stilt Sandpiper has green legs and thicker bill. Other similar-sized shorebirds lack decurved bill.