Sand Pipers and Semipalmated Plovers.

in Feathered Friends4 years ago

Note the blur of feathers at the top and bottom of the shot. 5 Pipers, 1 photo. Eat your heart out 2g1c.

The birds must be done breeding and getting back to normal habits as the tidal ponds at the bay in center of town have been rife with the activity of feeding pipers of late. Dozens of birds can be found slowly plodding through the ponds, pecking into the water to grab various bugs and possibly shrimp trapped due to the tide. The nights are getting longer and colder, so I imagine it's time to pack on some flying calories for the mass migrations south. Sandpipers have a cosmopolitan distribution, meaning they are practically worldwide, but they breed only in higher northern hemisphere areas. With one or two species claiming "the most northerly breeding bird."

DSCN4952.jpeg

hive_divider.png

Non breeding adult Semipalmated Plover

The Semipalmated Plovers get their name from their half webbed feet. (Semi Palm) They are often confused with their European counterpart, the Ringed Plover with identification most easily made by observing the toes of the animal (Good Luck With That!) The Ringed Plover has their outer 2 toes semi-webbed while the Semipalmated Plover has three toes half webbed. The black band on the belly is also thinner on the Semipalmated Plover. I am now second guessing if these are a species of European bird that made it over to Canada. There is one subspecies that will breed in Canada and then fly to AFRICA! It always blows my mind the distances that 30 gram birds will travel in one year. Let alone their entire lifetime.

Nummy mud bugs!

hive_divider.png

All photos are my own, taken by myself. They are taken using a Nikon P900 and a Samsung S20. Consider checking out my website, Midnight Sunsets. I'm also on Twitter and Instagram!

FxX5caie56ynwsjysm2XuNozdMysq1YNDRbt9X9VeerNm1981Q9QbBMDAvYrEjJ67Z3EpbrLRdsnBevZ2F6H5WcoSPwRUixeZ8mPnXPDCwCS.png

Hive Divider provided by @thepeakstudio

HSPC_Stock.png

Sort:  

I like the sandpipers and other birds that live near river beds and on the shores of the lakes. they are always so cute. Very nice shots you got pretty close.

I agree! They are very cute and I almost think their abundance causes them to be overlooked sometimes. Due to where I live it's hard to overlook them though as they appear to be the most abundant species.

Your current Rank (55) in the battle Arena of Holybread has granted you an Upvote of 27%

Congratulations @lacking! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You published more than 100 posts. Your next target is to reach 150 posts.
You got more than 300 replies. Your next target is to reach 400 replies.

You can view your badges on your board And compare to others on the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

Do not miss the last post from @hivebuzz:

The Customization Guide for the HiveBuzz store
Loading...

Excellent photos and information about these two birds! A Canada to Africa migration is crazy! Thanks for posting to the #featheredfriends community!
!tip

🎁 Hi @lacking! You have received 0.1 HIVE tip from @melinda010100!

@melinda010100 wrote lately about: Photo Chain Challenge 32 Edition-White/Walkway Feel free to follow @melinda010100 if you like it :)

Sending tips with @tipU - how to guide.

Submitted by #featheredfriends to the OCD Community Curation Program