Взрослая в брачном наряде (Eastern) © Evan Lipton eBird S36937949 Macaulay Library ML 58413801
Взрослая в брачном наряде (Western) © Ian Davies
Негнездящаяся взрослая © Allee Forsberg
Негнездящаяся взрослая/молодая © Dorian Anderson
Взрослая в брачном наряде (Eastern) © Samuel Paul Galick
+ 5
Молодая птица (Western) © Shawn Billerman
Молодая птица (Eastern) © Alan Kneidel
Негнездящаяся взрослая © Brad Rangell
Негнездящаяся взрослая © Mary Harrell

Перепончатопалый улит Tringa semipalmata

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Определение

ПРИ ПОДДЕРЖКЕ MERLIN

Large, stocky shorebird with a distinctive black-and-white wing pattern. Larger than Greater Yellowlegs, smaller than godwits. Overall grayish, with messy dark patterning in breeding plumage. Bill is straight and rather thick, with a paler base. Legs are grayish. Two distinct subspecies. “Eastern” Willet is smaller, darker, browner, shorter-billed, shorter-legged, and strictly coastal. Breeds in saltmarshes from Atlantic Canada to the Gulf of Mexico; migrates early, mostly departing the U.S. in August, and winters almost exclusively on the northern coast of South America. Especially likely to be seen foraging on extensive mudflats, sometimes in flocks. “Western” Willet is larger, paler, grayer, longer-billed, and longer-legged, giving it a more godwitlike appearance. Breeds in marshy grasslands in the Interior West; winters much further north than “Eastern” Willet, from both coasts of the U.S. to as far south as Chile. Especially likely to be seen on beaches.

ПРИ ПОДДЕРЖКЕ MERLIN