View allAll Photos Tagged Buffbreasted
A Buff-breasted Sandpiper feeds along a field at the Challenger Road side of Overpeck Park in Leonia, NJ. Digiscoped on 09/17/10.
A pair of Buff-breasted Sandpipers feed in a flooded field with Dunlin and other shorebirds near the Amphitheater in Everglades National Park in Flamingo, FL. Recorded in digiscope on 04/24/12.
A Buff-breasted Sandpiper feeds on the beach grasses on the false hook at Sandy Hook, NJ. Recorded in digiscope on 09/03/12.
If you turn the volume up you can hear the ticking noises made by the displaying male.
Canning River Delta, North Slope, AK
In the late summer, we get many of the Pacific Flyway shorebirds stopping in at Boundary Bay which is an Important Bird Area for birds to refuel before they continue on their journey south. This, not so common, visitor might stop and stay for a couple weeks. You have to be out on the shoreline looking on a regular basis as they are few in numbers in the Vancouver area. They are arctic breeders and typically use the Central Flyway to head to Argentina for winter. This bird used to be numerous, but there were severely over-hunted in the late 1800's and early 1900's.
Decided along with many others to visit Rye on Saturday for what would be a life tick for me. Lighting made good shots difficult. Still pleased with these.
Buff-breasted Sandpiper
Long distance, very active and hard to track. The video is brief, but representative of trying observe these birds
M&M Dairy
Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida
9/7/2015
David W Foster
Nikon P900
Equiv to 2000mm lens
Composite photo from 5 photos !!!
Final resolution : 12223 x 5251
5 different birds which visited our mossy log...
地点:Fraser's Hill 福隆港, Mukim Tras 都赖巫金, Daerah Raub 劳勿县, Pahang 彭亨州, Malaysia 马来西亚 (8K)
As fotografias não deverão ser utilizadas para fins comerciais, agradece-se que na sua utilização, que carece de autorização, se faça referência ao seu autor.
Paulo Pereira Pinto
rop80206@mail.telepac.pt
Buff-breasted Sandpiper
The photos should not be used for commercial purposes, Thank that in its use, it lacks authorization, reference is made to the author.
Pilado-acanalado
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The summer flooding along the Wabash river has created a lot of good mudflats and some great habitat for shorebirds. One of the best finds was a small group of Buff-breasted Sandpipers pointed out to me by Evan Speck while surveying the area together.
The flats are drying up quickly so unless we get a bunch more rain, I'd say these mudflats will be dry by the middle of the week.
Here are more than half of my lifers today within one frame: Stilt Sandpiper (sleeping on far left), Little Blue Heron (left), Red-Necked Phalarope (in water at the bottom of the black-necked stilt's legs in the middle), Snowy Egret (on right), and a Buff-Breasted Sandpiper (far right in the grass in the back). The Hudsonian Godwit didn't make it in the frame. He was to the left about 5 yards. I got better images of some of these that I'll upload later this week. I just thought this was cool that all of these species are so close. Goose Pond, Greene County, IN
The Stilt Sandpiper is my #213, the Snowy Egret is my #214, and the Little Blue Heron is my #215 bird species photographed in Indiana.
This guy was hard to spot even if you were looking right at him because he would move in and out of the weeds. I was really excited to add this one to the list because I wasn't sure when I'd find one. I am always amazed at what my next bird becomes. Taken September 1, 2014. Goose Pond, Greene County, IN
This is the #216 bird species I've photographed in Indiana.
This September, the remnants of two hurricanes, Katia and Maria, reached western Europe having moved northeastwards across the Atlantic mostly well offshore from North America. It seems likely that they were responsible for the recent exceptional influx of migratory American waders to Ireland & Britain and elsewhere in Europe, including a European record flock of 28 Buff-breasted Sandpipers in Tacumshin in Co. Wexford, 26 of which were photographed by Killian Mullarney.
This juvenile Semipalmated Plover Charadrius semipalmatus, which was found in Ventry in Co. Kerry last Saturday by Dan Brown of the UK based Punkbirders - whose excellent trip report is here, is among the rarest – or perhaps the species is under-recorded because it is so similar to our native Ringed Plover Charadrius hiaticula – here are comparison shots of juvenile Ringed Plovers by Mark Carmody and Ronan McLaughlin. It’s the third Irish record following one on Arranmore Island in Co. Donegal in 2003 and a controversial one in Ballycotton in Co. Cork in the early 1990’s that never made it to the official list – given the two more recent records, hopefully the Ballycotton bird will be reassessed. Up to 2009, the Collins Bird Guide 2nd edn lists only three European records, two in Britain and one in Spain – and none in Ireland??
I was lucky enough to see and photograph this bird late last Sunday seconds before the sun dropped behind Eagle Mountain to the west – it was taken with the Canon 100-400mm f4-5.6 lens, handheld – the exposure was at 400mm for 1/1250th of a second, f5.6 and ISO 800 – thank goodness for image stabilization! It has been heavily cropped in Lightroom 3 with noise reduction applied and otherwise minor adjustments for exposure.
The best identification features are the partial webbing between the toes – hence the name - as photographed by Mike O’Keefe, and the call - reminiscent of a Spotted Redshank - as recorded by another Punkbirder, Alexander Lees, but these features aren't in my shot! Supporting identification features include the partially white lores rising to the line of the gape and a pale eye ring. The former feature is not very marked on this bird and the latter is virtually absent. Other supporting features include an unbroken breast band, more contrastingly pale edges on the wing coverts and smaller overall size. However, all of these features can be shown to some extent by Ringed Plovers and birders also have to exclude the slightly smaller northern tundra race of Ringed Plover – for more on separation of these two species see Jon L. Dunn’s article that deals mostly with adults and some shots of a vagrant Semipalmated in Australia in 2010.
Buff-breasted Sandpiper, Calidris subruficollis, Robertson Co., Tx. 05-01-2016. Courtship display. Even though this bird won't breed until it reaches the arctic, they sometimes engage in these displays during migration stopovers.