Back to photostream

Curlew Stance

This bristle-thighed curlew is indigenous, though uncommon, in Hawaii where it is known as kioea. It has a beautiful, distinctively long, decurved bill used to forage in tall grass, mud, sand, and reef flats exposed at low tide. The namesake bristle-like feathers around the thighs are the field mark that differentiates it from the similar looking whimbrel. An annual trans-Pacific migrant summer nesting in western Alaska, it travels thousands of nonstop miles over the Pacific to spend the rest of the year on oceanic islands ranging from Hawaii to French Polynesian. Birds destined for the South Pacific overfly the Hawaiian archipelago making the kioea, along with the godwit; one of the longest nonstop migrants of any avian species. The entire worldwide population was estimated to be 10,000 individuals in 2003. Extrapolating recent counts in Tuamotu indicates the population may have declined to as little as 5,000 birds. Anecdotally, I’m seeing more on Oahu than previous years.

666 views
19 faves
4 comments
Uploaded on November 24, 2023
Taken on October 12, 2023