Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789 is a animal in the Recurvirostridae family, order Charadriiformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789 (Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789)
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Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789

Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789

Recurvirostra americana, the American avocet, is a North American wading bird with distinctive physical traits, calls, distribution, and feeding habits.

Genus
Recurvirostra
Order
Charadriiformes
Class
Aves

About Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789

The American avocet (Recurvirostra americana J.F.Gmelin, 1789) measures 40–51 cm (16–20 in) in length, has a 68–76 cm (27–30 in) wingspan, and weighs 275–420 g (9.7–14.8 oz). Its bill is black, pointed, and slightly curved upward toward the tip. The bill is long, more than twice the length of the species' small, rounded head. Like many waders, the American avocet has long, slender legs and slightly webbed feet. Its legs are pastel grey-blue, which gives the species its colloquial name "blue shanks". Its back plumage is black and white, and its underbelly is white. During the breeding season, the head and neck (and part of the upper breast) are colored brassy orange. After the breeding season, these bright feathers are molted to white and grey. American avocets preen their feathers, a behavior commonly classified as a comfort movement. The species' call has been described as both a shrill and melodic alarm bweet that rises in inflection over time. Avocets produce three distinct calls: a common call, an excited call, and a broken wing call. The common call is a loud, repeated wheep. The excited call has a similar wheep sound, but speeds up instead of having an even rhythm. The broken wing call is noticeably different from the other two: it is a distressed screech, and sounds alarming rather than melodic. Historically, American avocets ranged across most of the United States before they were extirpated from the East Coast. Their breeding habitat includes marshes, beaches, prairie ponds, and shallow lakes in the midwestern United States, extending as far north as southern Canada. Most breeding grounds lie just east of the Rocky Mountains, covering parts of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Utah, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, and extending south into parts of New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. During migration, the species passes through almost every state in the western United States. Wintering grounds for the American avocet are mainly coastal. Along the Atlantic Ocean, they occur in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. They also winter along the Gulf of Mexico in Florida, Texas, and Mexico, and along the Pacific Ocean in California and Mexico. Resident populations are found in central California and the Mexican states of Zacatecas, San Luis Potosí, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Mexico City, and Puebla. During peak spring migration, which typically peaks around April or May, flocks of 50 to 300 avocets migrate together to breeding sites. American avocets prefer foraging habitats with fine sediments. In winter, they feed extensively on brine shrimp. Foraging usually involves pecking while walking or wading along the shore, but the species can also swim to expand its foraging range. During the breeding season, avocets still eat brine shrimp but switch their main diet to brine flies. Brine flies and their larvae are so abundant on avocet breeding grounds that they often blacken the surface of exposed mud, and provide the main food source for avocets throughout the breeding season. American avocets use both visual and tactile feeding methods. The primary visual feeding method is pecking at flies. They also feed by plunging (submerging the head and neck), snatching (catching flying insects), and bill pursuit (repeatedly opening and closing the bill while moving the head along the water surface). Tactile feeding methods include filtering, scraping, and scythe feeding.

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

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Charadriiformes Recurvirostridae Recurvirostra

More from Recurvirostridae

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

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