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Bird name:

Common Snipe

Gallinago gallinagoOrder: CHARADRIIFORMES Family: Sandpipers (Scolopacidae)
Codes: Common Name: COSN Scientific Name: GALGAN ITIS Taxonomic No.: 176700
Common Snipe Portrait
Family
Species Gallinago gallinago
Length10.5 Inches
Wingspan16.5 Inches

Common Snipe

Common Snipe: Longest-billed of all snipes, best identified by broad white stripe at base of underwing. Upperparts cryptically colored with brown and yellow-brown streaks of many different shades. Underparts white but strongly suffused with orange wash, heavily barred and streaked with dark brown.

● Song: "scaap"

● Foraging & Feeding: Common Snipe: Slow moving and creeping along ground in hunchbacked posture as it probes into soil and mud with its very long bill searching for earthworms and insect larvae. Finds food by touch with its highly sensitive bill. Often vibrates bill while probing to startle worms into moving. Usually feeds at dawn and dusk, often in groups where food plentiful.

● Breeding & nesting: Common Snipe: Male performs elaborate aerial courtship flights in the evening, making winnowing sound by rushing air through specially modified outer tail feathers. Female builds nest on ground among dense grasses or sedges. Female incubates two to four brown and black marked, olive brown eggs for 18 to 20 days. Male lures newly hatched chicks out of nest and feeds them separately while female continues incubating remaining eggs. Young make their first flight at 20 days.

● Similar species: Common Snipe: Wilson's Snipe has much less orange wash on its flanks, and black and white stripes at base of underwing are of equal width. Jack Snipe is significantly smaller, has a much shorter bill, and has a split white eyebrow. Pin-tailed Snipe has a squat appearance due to its shorter tail, secondary wing coverts are strongly barred with dark and light bands of equal width.

Flight Pattern

When startled from ground will leap up with dashing erratic flight and drop to ground again quickly. Courtship flight has fairly shallow quivering wingbeats.
Common Snipe Body Illustration
● Range & Habitat: Common Snipe: Breeds extensively across northern Europe and Asia, then winters in parts of Europe, north Africa, and across southern Asia. Nearly always in marshes, wetlands, flooded fields, and moisty grasslands. Regularly appears on Aleutian Islands of Alaska.
BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
Population
MigrationMigratory
Weight4.5 Ounces
4 and 6 letter alpha codesX

The four letter common name alpha code is is derived from the first two letters of the common first name and the first two letters of common last name. The six letter species name alpha code is derived from the first three letters of the scientific name (genus) and the first three letters of the scientific name (species). See (1) below for the rules used to create the codes..

Four-letter (for English common names) and six-letter (for scientific names) species alpha codes were developed by Pyle and DeSante (2003, North American Bird-Bander 28:64-79) to reflect A.O.U. taxonomy and nomenclature (A.O.U. 1998) as modified by Supplements 42 (Auk 117:847-858, 2000) and 43 (Auk 119:897-906, 2002). The list has been updated by Pyle and DeSante to reflect changes reported by the A.O.U from 2003 through 2006.

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ITIS CodesX

The Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) was established in the mid-1990�s as a cooperative project among several federal agencies to improve and expand upon taxonomic data (known as the NODC Taxonomic Code) maintained by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

To find the ITIS page for a bird species go to the ITIS web site advanced search and report page at http://www.itis.gov/advanced_search.html. You can enter the TSN or the common name of the bird. It will return the ITIS page for that bird. Another way to obtain the ITIS page is to use the Google search engine. Enter the string ITIS followed by the taxonomic ID, for example "ITIS 178041" will return the page for the Allen's Hummingbird.

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Parts of a Standing birdX
Head Feathers and MarkingsX
Parts of a Flying birdX