Curlew Sandpiper Photo Gallery
Breeding adult
A medium-sized shorebird with a long, downcurved bill and long, black legs. Breeding adult ranges from brick-red to chestnut on the face, neck, breast, and belly, with a white vent and undertail coverts, and spangled rufous, black, and white upperparts. In fresh breeding plumage, underparts can have a scalloped look due to fresh white feather tips.
© Khemthong Tonsakulrungruang / Macaulay LibrarySamut Sakhon, April 15, 2015Nonbreeding adult
Nonbreeding adult has gray upperparts, white underparts with some gray streaking across the breast, and a prominent white eyeline bordered by a gray cap.
© Ian Davies / Macaulay LibraryOromia, December 29, 2014Juvenile
A medium-sized shorebird with a long, downcurved bill and long wings that give an overall “stretched out” look. Juvenile has scaly brown upperparts, a prominent white line above the eye, and mostly white underparts with limited streaking on the breast.
© Don DesJardin / Macaulay LibraryCalifornia, September 22, 2020Not all videos have soundJuvenile
Juvenile has scaly upperparts (due to white edges on dark feathers), a buffy wash and fine streaking on the side of the breast, a dark line running from the base of the bill to the eye, a white line above the eye, and a dark cap.
© Tammy McQuade / Macaulay LibraryCalifornia, September 17, 2020Nonbreeding adult
In flight in all plumages, note the white rump, gray tail, and white wing stripe.
© Steven McBride / Macaulay LibraryNew South Wales, December 05, 2018Breeding adult
Nests on arctic tundra, where the female typically incubates four eggs in a shallow depression on dry ground.
© Laurent Demongin / Macaulay LibraryRussia, July 05, 2008Not all videos have soundMolting adult
Molting birds in late summer are a patchwork of breeding and nonbreeding plumages.
© Jeremiah Trimble / Macaulay LibraryMassachusetts, August 25, 2012Habitat
Frequently occurs on tidal mudflats during migration and the nonbreeding season.
© joshua Dsilva / Macaulay LibraryGoa, September 19, 2016Nonbreeding/immature
Often occurs in large flocks during migration and on nonbreeding grounds. Uses its long bill to probe for prey on tidal mudflats, salt pans, sandy beaches, rice fields, lake edges, and sewage lagoons.
© Greg Baker / Macaulay LibraryErongo, November 30, 2007Not all videos have soundCompare with Similar Species
Click on an image to compare
Species in This Family
Sandpipers and Allies(Order: Charadriiformes, Family: Scolopacidae)
More to Read
Don't miss a thing! Join our email list
The Cornell Lab will send you updates about birds,
birding, and opportunities to help bird conservation.