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Scolopacidae is a large family of shorebirds, or waders, which mainly includes many species known as sandpipers, but also others such as woodcocks, curlews and snipes. Most of these species eat small invertebrates picked out of the mud or soil. Different lengths of bills enable multiple species to feed in the same habitat, particularly on the coast, without direct competition for food.
Sandpipers have long bodies and legs, and narrow wings. Most species have a narrow bill, but the form and length are variable. They are small to medium-sized birds, measuring Template:Convert in length. The bills are sensitive, allowing the birds to feel the mud and sand as they probe for food. They generally have dull plumage, with cryptic brown, grey, or streaked patterns, although some display brighter colours during the breeding season.<ref name=EoB>Template:Cite book</ref>
Most species nest in open areas and defend their territories with aerial displays. The nest itself is a simple scrape in the ground, in which the bird typically lays three or four eggs. The young of most species are precocial.<ref name=EoB/>
TaxonomyEdit
The family Scolopacidae was introduced (as Scolopacea) by the French polymath Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1815.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The family contains 98 extant or recently extinct species divided into 15 genera.<ref name=ioc>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> For more details, see the article List of sandpiper species.
The following genus-level cladogram of the Scolopacidae is based on a study by David Černý and Rossy Natale that was published in 2022.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Clade
Image | Genus | Living and recently extinct species | ||
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File:CURLEW, LONG-BILLED (3-22-10) morro bay, ca -04 (4455146301).jpg | Numenius Template:Au |
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File:Bar-tailed Godwit.jpg | Limosa Template:Au |
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File:Arenaria interpres (habitus).jpg | Arenaria Template:Au |
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File:Tuamotu sandpiper.jpg | Prosobonia Template:Au |
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File:Semipalmated Sandpiper (8578570180).jpg | Calidris Template:Au |
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File:Short-billed dowitcher in JBWR (40844).jpg | Limnodromus Template:Au |
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File:EURASIAN-WOODCOCK-MANGPOO.jpg | Scolopax Template:Au |
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File:Coenocorypha aucklandica meinertzhagenae 387315409 (cropped).jpg | Coenocorypha Template:Au |
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File:Jack snipe.png | Lymnocryptes Template:Au |
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File:Gallinago gallinago a1.JPG | Gallinago Template:Au |
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File:Terek sandpiper 9.jpg | Xenus Template:Au |
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File:Phalaropus fulicarius 98755138 (cropped).jpg | Phalaropus Template:Au |
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File:Actitis hypoleucos 1 tb (Marek Szczepanek).jpg | Actitis Template:Au |
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File:Lesser yellowlegs bunche beach (31791842132).jpg | Tringa Template:Au |
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EvolutionEdit
The early fossil record is scant for a group that was probably present at the non-avian dinosaurs' extinction. "Totanus" teruelensis (Late Miocene of Los Mansuetos (Spain) is sometimes considered a scolopacid – maybe a shank – but may well be a larid; little is known of it.
Paractitis has been named from the Early Oligocene of Saskatchewan (Canada), while Mirolia is known from the Middle Miocene at Deiningen in the Nördlinger Ries (Germany). Most living genera would seem to have evolved throughout the Oligocene to Miocene with the waders perhaps a bit later; see the genus accounts for the fossil record.
In addition there are some indeterminable remains that might belong to extant genera or their extinct relatives:
- Scolopacidae gen. et sp. indet. (Middle Miocene of Františkovy Lázně, Czech Republic – Late Miocene of Kohfidisch, Austria)
- Scolopacidae gen. et sp. indet. (Edson Early Pliocene of Sherman County, Kansas, United States)<ref group="note">A distal right tarsometatarsus of a bird roughly similar to a pectoral sandpiper. Probably calidrid or basal to them, somewhat reminiscent of turnstones.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref></ref>
DescriptionEdit
The sandpipers exhibit considerable range in size and appearance, the wide range of body forms reflecting a wide range of ecological niches. Sandpipers range in size from the least sandpiper, at as little as Template:Convert and Template:Convert in length, to the Far Eastern curlew, at up to Template:Convert in length, and the Eurasian curlew, at up to Template:Convert. Within species there is considerable variation in patterns of sexual dimorphism. Males are larger than females in ruffs and several sandpipers, but are smaller than females in the knots, curlews, phalaropes and godwits. The sexes are similarly sized in the snipes, woodcock and tringine sandpipers. Compared to the other large family of wading birds, the plovers (Charadriidae), they tend to have smaller eyes, more slender heads, and longer thinner bills. Some are quite long-legged, and most species have three forward pointing toes with a smaller hind toe (the exception is the sanderling, which lacks a hind toe).<ref name = "HBW"/>
Sandpipers are more geared towards tactile foraging methods than the plovers, which favour more visual foraging methods, and this is reflected in the high density of tactile receptors in the tips of their bills. These receptors are housed in a slight horny swelling at the tip of the bill (except for the surfbird and the two turnstones). Bill shape is highly variable within the family, reflecting differences in feeding ecology. Bill length relative to head length varies from three times the length of the head in the long-billed curlew to just under half the head length in the Tuamotu sandpiper. Bills may be straight, slightly upcurled or strongly downcurved.<ref name = "HBW">Template:Cite book</ref> Like all birds, the bills of sandpipers are capable of cranial kinesis, literally being able to move the bones of the skull (other than the obvious movement of the lower jaw) and specifically bending the upper jaw without opening the entire jaw, an act known as rhynchokinesis. It has been hypothesized this helps when probing by allowing the bill to be partly opened with less force and improving manipulation of prey items in the substrate. Rhynchokinesis is also used by sandpipers feeding on prey in water to catch and manipulate prey.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Distribution, habitat, and movementsEdit
The sandpipers have a cosmopolitan distribution, occurring across most of the world's land surfaces except for Antarctica and the driest deserts. A majority of the family breed at moderate to high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, in fact accounting for the most northerly breeding birds in the world. Only a few species breed in tropical regions, ten of which are snipes and woodcocks and the remaining species being the unusual Tuamotu sandpiper, which breeds in French Polynesia (although prior to the arrival of humans in the Pacific there were several other closely related species of Polynesian sandpiper).<ref name = "HBW"/>
Diet and feedingEdit
There are broadly four feeding styles employed by the sandpipers, although many species are flexible and may use more than one style. The first is pecking with occasional probing, usually done by species in drier habitats that do not have soft soils or mud. The second, and most frequent, method employed is probing soft soils, muds and sands for prey. The third, used by Tringa shanks, involves running in shallow water with the bill under the water chasing fish, a method that uses sight as well as tactile senses. The final method, employed by the phalaropes and some Calidris sandpipers, involves pecking at the water for small prey.<ref name = "HBW"/> A few species of scolopacids are omnivorous to some extent, taking seeds and shoots as well as invertebrates.
BreedingEdit
Many sandpipers form monogamous pairs, but some sandpipers have female-only parental care, some male-only parental care, some sequential polyandry and other compete for the mate on the lek. Sandpipers lay three or four eggs into the nest, which is usually a vague depression or scrape in the open ground, scarcely lined with soft vegetation.<ref name="HBW" /> In species where both parents incubate the eggs, females and males share their incubation duties in various ways both within and between species. In some pairs, parents exchange on the nest in the morning and in the evening so that their incubation rhythm follows a 24-hour day, in others each sex may sit on the nest continuously for up to 24 hours before it is exchanged by its partner.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In species where only a single parent incubates the eggs, during the night the parent sits on the eggs nearly continuously and then during the warmest part of a day leaves the nest for short feeding bouts.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Chicks hatch after about three weeks of incubation and are able to walk and forage within a few hours of hatching. A single parent or both parents guide and brood the chicks.<ref name="HBW" />
GalleryEdit
- Becasseau minute - tunisie.jpg
Sandpiper - Tunisia
- Bristle-thighed Curlew and 2 Ruddy Turnstones.jpg
Bristle-thighed curlew (Numenius tahitiensis, right) and ruddy turnstones (Arenaria interpres)
- Gallinago gallinago 6 (Marek Szczepanek).jpg
Common snipe (Gallinago gallinago)
- Common Greenshank (Tringa nebularia) at Bharatpur I IMG 5523.jpg
Greenshank (Tringa nebularia)
FootnotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Sandpiper media on the Internet Bird Collection
- Cornell Lab of Ornithology sandpiper search results
- RedKnot.org links to shorebird recovery sites, movies, events & other information on red knot rufa and horseshoe crabs.
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