Common Redshank: Large sandpiper with scaled black and brown upperparts, dark-streaked neck and breast, white eye-ring broken in front, and pale belly and sides with dark chevrons. Wings are dark with thick, white trailing edges visible in flight. Long legs are orange-red. Bill is short and red with black tip. Sexes are similar.
Common Redshank: Widespread across Eurasia; accidental in Newfoundland. Preferred habitats include mudflats, marshes, and grassy fields.
"tleu-hu-hu", "ti-you"
Wary and nervous birds, Common Redshanks are often the first to panic and give noisy alarm calls to other nearby waders.
They are quickly identified by their red legs, but confusion can occur if their legs are mud-covered. Juveniles may have greenish-yellow legs.
They find their food by sight and only rarely probe into the mud or sand.
A group of sandpipers has many collective nouns, including a "bind", "contradiction", "fling", "hill", and "time-step" of sandpipers.
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Family
Sandpiper (Scolopacidae)_blue
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Species
Tringa totanus
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Length11
Inches
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Wingspan22
Inches
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Common Redshank: Large sandpiper, scaled black and brown upperparts, dark-streaked neck and breast, white eye-ring broken in front, pale belly and sides with dark chevrons. Dark wings with white trailing edges visible in flight. Legs are orange-red. Short bill is red with black tip.
● Song: "tleu-hu-hu", "ti-you"
● Foraging & Feeding: Common Redshank: Eats small fish, mollusks, crustaceans, and insects.
● Breeding & nesting: Common Redshank: Four buff eggs marked with black, brown, or purple gray are laid on the ground in a shallow hollow of a grassy tussock. Nest is lined with fine plant material. Incubation ranges from 23 to 24 days and is carried out by both parents.
● Similar species: Common Redshank: Spotted Redshank has black-and-white spots on upperparts, gray mottling on secondaries, white rump, and longer, dark red legs.
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BreedingMonogamous, Small colonies
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PopulationAccidental in North America
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MigrationMigratory
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Weight4.6
Ounces
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