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Difference between revisions of "Rock Sandpiper" - BirdForum Opus

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[[Image:Rock_Sand_1.JPG|thumb|550px|right|Photo by {{user|Michael+Woodruff|Michael Woodruff}}<br />Brown Point Jetty, Ocean Shores, Grays Harbor County, [[Washington]], January 2008]]
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[[Image:Rock_Sand_1.JPG|thumb|550px|right|Adult winter<br />Photo by {{user|Michael+Woodruff|Michael Woodruff}}<br />Brown Point Jetty, Ocean Shores, Grays Harbor County, [[Washington]], January 2008]]
 
;[[:Category:Calidris|Calidris]] ptilocnemis
 
;[[:Category:Calidris|Calidris]] ptilocnemis
 
==Identification==
 
==Identification==
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'''Juvenile''': similar to adult summer, but lacking blackish lower breast patch in all subspecies.
 
'''Juvenile''': similar to adult summer, but lacking blackish lower breast patch in all subspecies.
 
====Similar species====
 
====Similar species====
Apart from [[Purple Sandpiper]], the only small dark wader with yellow legs likely to be seen on a rocky shore. Outside of adult summer plumage, Purple Sandpiper can only be distinguished by distribution (Atlantic coasts, versus Pacific for Rock).
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Apart from [[Purple Sandpiper]], the only small dark wader with yellow legs likely to be seen on a rocky shore. Outside of adult summer plumage, Purple Sandpiper can only be distinguished by distribution (Atlantic coasts, versus Pacific for Rock). [[Surfbird]] is similar in plumage colors, but distinctly larger, with a shorter beak.
  
 
==Distribution==
 
==Distribution==

Revision as of 18:13, 15 April 2017


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Adult winter
Photo by Michael Woodruff
Brown Point Jetty, Ocean Shores, Grays Harbor County, Washington, January 2008
Calidris ptilocnemis

Identification

Length: 20–23 cm, weight 80–135 g
The bill is thin and dark with a yellow base, and the legs are short and drab greenish in summer, yellow in winter.
Summer: gray-brown above and on breast, with brown fringes to scapular and mantle feathers; blackish lower breast patch on some subspecies.
Winter: dark blackish-gray with a purple sheen on top, and white underneath. The breast is grey and the rump is black.
Juvenile: similar to adult summer, but lacking blackish lower breast patch in all subspecies.

Similar species

Apart from Purple Sandpiper, the only small dark wader with yellow legs likely to be seen on a rocky shore. Outside of adult summer plumage, Purple Sandpiper can only be distinguished by distribution (Atlantic coasts, versus Pacific for Rock). Surfbird is similar in plumage colors, but distinctly larger, with a shorter beak.

Distribution

Subspecies ptilocnemis
Photo by martinuk
St Paul, Pribilof Islands, Alaska, June 2003

Northwest North America and northeast Asia
North America: breeds in Alaska, winters in Alaska, British Columbia, Washington, Oregon and California
Asia: breeds in far eastern Russia, winters there and in northeastern Japan

Taxonomy

Very closely related to Purple Sandpiper; in the past sometimes considered conspecific with it, particularly the subspecies C. p. couesi, 'C. p. quarta, and C. p. tschuktschorum[1].

Subspecies

There are 4 subspecies[2]:

  • C. p. quarta:
  • Kuril Islands, southern Kamchatka Peninsula and Komandorskiye Islands.
  • C. p. tschuktschorum:
  • C. p. ptilocnemis:
  • Pribilof, St. Matthew and Hall islands; winters Alaska Peninsula. Larger and paler than the other subspecies.
  • C. p. couesi:

An additional subspecies C. p. kurilensis is generally considered invalid[3].

Habitat

Rocky coasts, mudflats and tundra.

Behaviour

Breeding

Ground nesters. The male prepares a few nests and the female selects one to lay her 4 eggs. Both adults incubate the eggs, but the rearing of the chicks is left to the male.

Diet

Its diet includes insects,mollusks,marine worms, also some plant material.

References

  1. Hayman, P., Marchant, J., & Prater, T. (1986). Shorebirds. Helm, London. ISBN 0-7136-3509-6
  2. Clements, JF. 2011. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to August 2011. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0801445019. Spreadsheet available at http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/downloadable-clements-checklist
  3. Avibase
  4. BF Member observations
  5. Wikipedia

Recommended Citation

External Links

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