General
Terek Sandpiper: Medium-sized sandpiper with lightly spotted gray upperparts, white underparts, and gray wash on upper breast. Eyestripes are dark. Bill is long, orange with black tip, and distinctly curved upward. Legs are relatively short and bright orange. Sexes are similar.
Range and Habitat
Terek Sandpiper: Eurasian species; rare migrant on outer Aleutians; accidental in fall to coastal British Columbia, California, and Massachusetts. Breeds along rivers and lakeshores in wooded areas and marshes. Mostly coastal outside breeding season, usually found in estuaries, mudflats, and tidal creeks.
Voice Text
"twit-witt-witt", "du-du-du"
Interesting Facts
The Terek Sandpiper is the only member of the genus Xenus.
It feeds in a distinctive and very active way, chasing insects and other mobile prey, and sometimes then running to the water's edge to wash its catch.
A group of sandpipers has many collective nouns, including a "bind", "contradiction", "fling", "hill", and "time-step" of sandpipers.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Spotted Sandpiper
Greater Yellowlegs
Solitary Sandpiper
Bar-tailed Godwit
Lesser Yellowlegs
.