
Blacktailed godwit is called grutto in the Netherlands. While flying their wing profile is unmistakeable.
Latin name
Limosa limosa
Family
Sandpipers and allies (Scolopacidae)
Overview
Black-tailed godwits are large wading birds. In summer, they have bright orangey-brown chests and bellies, but in winter they’re more greyish-brown. Their most distinctive features are their long beaks and legs, and the black and white stripes on their wings. Female black-tailed godwits are bigger and heavier than the males, with a noticeably longer beak (which helps the sexes to avoid competing for food with each other). They’re very similar to bar-tailed godwits, which breed in the Arctic. Black-taileds have longer legs, and bar-taileds don’t have striped wings. As the names suggest, the tail patterns are different, too.
Where to see them
Estuaries and coastal lagoons are the best places to look for black-tailed godwits at almost any time of year, though they also visit wetland sites inland. We also have a small, vulnerable breeding population, on a select few wet meadows and marshes; they migrate to west Africa for winter. Birds from Iceland spend winter in the UK.
When to see them
It’s easiest to see black-tailed godwits from late summer through winter.
What they eat
Insects, worms and snails, but also some plants, beetles, grasshoppers and other small insects during the breeding season.
Estimated numbers
Europe UK breeding* UK wintering* UK passage*
99-140,000 pairs 44-52 pairs 15,860 birds 12,400 birds
(ack: http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdguide/)
Benny…a small correction from me. Earlier I had commented that your crane series was very nice. I now realise that it is not just your crane series alone; your entire bird series is delightful.
Very beautiful.