Brutkleid Männchen © Sharif Uddin eBird S54931331 Macaulay Library ML 150962421
brütendes Weibchen © Ian Davies
nicht brütender Adultvogel © David Irving
Immatur © Janine Schutt
nicht brütender Adultvogel / immatur © Ian Davies
+ 4
nicht brütender Adultvogel / immatur © Ged Tranter
mausernder Adultvogel © Gayle Dangers-Meusel
nicht brütender Adultvogel (mit Black-bellied Plover) © Mike Wittmer

Tundra-Goldregenpfeifer Pluvialis fulva

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UNTERSTÜTZT VON MERLIN

Slender plover spangled with gold. Breeding plumage shows black belly and face with mottled white sides and undertail coverts and a white stripe down the side of the neck that continues onto the sides of the chest and flanks. Nonbreeding plumage is duller grayish-brown overall with a variable golden wash, often quite bright. Juveniles are crisp and neatly spangled above, washed with gold on the upperparts. At all seasons, note more slender shape, slightly smaller bill, and brighter golden tones than Black-bellied Plover, along with grayish underwing in flight. Extremely similar to American Golden-Plover; Pacific is slightly shorter-winged, longer-legged, and larger-billed, but these features are difficult to judge. Juvenile Pacific is usually brighter than American, especially on the face and neck. Pacific found more regularly on beaches and mudflats than American, but much overlap; also note range. Breeds on Arctic tundra from Alaska to Russia. Winters extensively across Southeast Asia, the South Pacific, Australia, and New Zealand; small numbers found in fall on west coast of U.S. Note voice: a quick “pip” note followed by a rising “plooEEP!”, first note shorter and more clipped than Black-bellied. Also makes shorter, more plaintive calls similar to American but lower-pitched.

UNTERSTÜTZT VON MERLIN