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Tringa nebularia

(Common Greenshank)

Interesting Facts

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Common Names

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Click on the language to view common names.

Common Names in Dutch:

Groenpootruiter

Common Names in English:

Common Greenshank, Greenshank

Common Names in Finnish:

valkoviklo

Common Names in French:

Chevalier aboyeur

Common Names in German:

Grünschenkel

Common Names in Hebrew:

ביצנית ירוקת-רגל

Common Names in Italian:

Pantana

Common Names in Japanese:

アオアシシギ

Common Names in Russian:

Bolshoy Ulit, Большой улит, Улит большой

Common Names in Spanish:

Archibebe claro

Common Names in Swedish:

Gluttsnäppa

Description

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Physical Description

Adult : Head : brown streaks on sides Crown: whitish with brown streaking Bill: Curvature: slightly upturned Length : long Neck: streaks and spots of brown on white Hindneck: whitish with brown streaking Body: Sides: streaks and spots of brown on white Underparts: white Upperparts: pale brownish gray scalloped with white Legs : Leg Color: olive-green or yellowish Leg Length: long Tail: white with dark brown barring.

Size/Age/Growth

About 13 inches long, with a wingspan of 23 to 26 inches. Adults weigh about 6.1 ounces .

Habitat

Typically found at an altitude of 0 to 5,013 meters (0 to 16,447 feet).[1]

Ecology: Behaviour This species is fully migratory and generally migrates overland on a broad front, although the majority of Western European birds passes through coastal and estuarine sites1, 4. The Wadden Sea for example is used by many Fennoscandian birds as a stop-over and moulting site from late-April to mid-May1. Most palearctic birds are trans-Saharan migrants1, the main autumn passage through northern and temperate Europe occurring from the second week of July to late-October4. One parent (usually the female) leaves the breeding territory first from late-June to early July1, 4, with the other parent and juveniles following around 3-6 weeks later4. Flocks arrive in southern Africa and Australia from August to September, and depart again in March for the northward return migration1. The species departs for its breeding grounds during the evening5 and once there it breeds between late-April and June1. Some non-breeding birds may also remain in the south throughout the summer1, 4. The species normally breeds in very dispersed pairs3, but on passage it can occur singly or in small flocks (flocks of 20-25 are common in southern Africa)4, although congregations of 100 or more may very rarely occur at high tide or at roosting sites2. This species feeds both diurnally and nocturnally1. Habitat Breeding This species breeds in the boreal forest zone from sea level to 1,200 m in Norway3, 4 (although predominantly up to 450 m)4, in swampy forest clearings, woody moorland, open bogs and marshes (including raised and blanket bogs)1, and eutrophic lakes with margins of dead and decaying vegetation3. It avoids bare or broken barren expanses, mountain escarpments , and closed forests with very dense, tall vegetation4. Non-breeding In its wintering grounds this species frequents a variety of freshwater , marine and artificial wetlands, including swamps , open muddy or rocky shores of lakes and large rivers , sewage farms , saltworks, inundated rice-fields1, ponds , reservoirs4, flooded grasslands5, saltmarshes, sandy or muddy coastal flats, mangroves , estuaries1, lagoons and pools on tidal reefs4 or exposed coral2, although it generally avoids open coastline1. On migration this species occurs on inland flooded meadows, dried-up lakes, sandbars and marshes1. Diet This species is chiefly carnivorous , its diet consisting of insects and their larvae (especially beetles), crustaceans, annelids , molluscs , amphibians1, small fish (mullet Liza spp. , clinids Clinus spp. and tilapia Oreochromis spp.)5 and occasionally rodents1. Breeding site The nest is a shallow scrape on open ground, often in clearings in woods4, and is typically placed next to a piece of dead wood1, or beside rocks, trees3, fences and sticks (for use as nest markers)4.

[2].

List of Habitats :

Biology

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Migration

Migratory

Taxonomy

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Synonyms

Tringa nebularia (Gunnerus, 1767)

Notes

Name Status: Accepted Name .

Last scrutiny: 17-Oct-2001

Similar Species

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Greater Yellowlegs

Members of the genus Tringa

ZipcodeZoo has pages for 19 species and subspecies in this genus:

T. brevipes (Gray-Tailed Tattler) · T. cinerea (Terek Sandpiper) · T. erythropus (Spotted Redshank) · T. flavipes (Lesser Long-Legged Tattler) · T. glareola (Wood Sandpiper) · T. guttifer (NordmannÌs Greenshank) · T. hypoleucos (Common Sandpiper) · T. hypoleucos hypoleucos (Common Sandpiper) · T. incana (Wandering Tattler) · T. macularia (Spotted Sandpiper) · T. melanoleuca (Big Yellow-Legged Plover) · T. nebularia (Common Greenshank) · T. ochropus (Green Sandpiper) · T. solitaria (American Green Sandpiper) · T. solitaria cinnamomea (Solitary Sandpiper) · T. solitaria solitaria (Solitary Sandpiper) · T. stagnatilis (Marsh Sandpiper) · T. totanus (Common Sandpiper) · T. totanus totanus (Common Sandpiper)

More Info

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Further Reading

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Notes

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Contributors

Data Sources

Accessed through GBIF Data Portal November 12, 2007:

Identifiers

Footnotes

  1. Mean = 638.600 meters (2,095.144 feet), Standard Deviation = 1,174.600 based on 22,399 observations. Altitude information for each observation from British Oceanographic Data Centre. [back]
  2. BirdLife International 2009. Tringa nebularia. In: IUCN 2011. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2011.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 05 February 2012. [back]
Last Revised: 7/14/2012