Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758) is a animal in the Scolopacidae family, order Charadriiformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758) (Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758))
🦋 Animalia

Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758)

Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758)

Calidris pygmaea, the spoon-billed sandpiper, is a small migratory wader with a unique spatulate bill.

Family
Genus
Calidris
Order
Charadriiformes
Class
Aves

About Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758)

This species has the scientific name Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758), commonly called the spoon-billed sandpiper. Its most distinctive feature is its spatulate bill. Breeding adult spoon-billed sandpipers have a red-brown head, neck, and breast with dark brown streaks, and blackish upperparts with buff and pale rufous fringing. Non-breeding adults do not have reddish colouration; instead they have pale brownish-grey upperparts, with whitish fringing to the wing-coverts. All adults have white underparts and black legs. The species has a total length of 14–16 cm (5.5–6.3 in). Detailed measurements are: wing 98–106 mm, bill 19–24 mm, bill tip breadth 10–12 mm, tarsus 19–22 mm, and tail 37–39 mm. Contact calls of this species include a quiet preep or a shrill wheer. The song, produced during display, is an intermittent buzzing and descending trill transcribed as preer-prr-prr. Male display flight combines singing with brief hovers, circling, and rapid diving. The breeding habitat of the spoon-billed sandpiper is sea coasts and adjacent hinterland on the Chukchi Peninsula, extending southwards along the isthmus of the Kamchatka Peninsula. It migrates down the Pacific coast through Japan, Korea and China to its main wintering grounds in south and southeast Asia, where it has been recorded from India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines, Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore. Phylogenetic analyses of complete mitogenome sequences indicate that South Korean and Chinese C. pygmaea groups are closely related to Arenaria interpres, due to similarity in their series of protein-coding genes. In March 2024, a spoon-billed sandpiper was sighted at Balanga, Bataan mudflat in the Philippines. In terms of behaviour and ecology, the spoon-billed sandpiper feeds by moving its bill from side to side as it walks forward with its head down. This species nests in June–July on coastal tundra areas, choosing grassy locations close to freshwater pools. Spoon-billed sandpipers feed on tundra moss, small animal species including mosquitoes, flies, beetles, and spiders, and at certain times also feed on marine invertebrates such as shrimp and worms.

Photo: (c) Alexander Yakovlev, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Alexander Yakovlev · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Charadriiformes Scolopacidae Calidris

More from Scolopacidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

Identify Calidris pygmaea (Linnaeus, 1758) instantly — even offline

iNature uses on-device AI to identify plants, animals, fungi and more. No internet needed.

Download iNature — Free

Start Exploring Nature Today

Download iNature for free. 10 identifications on us. No account needed. No credit card required.

Download Free on App Store