• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
Where premium quality meets exceptional value. ZEISS Conquest HDX.
Marbled Godwit
jmorlan

Marbled Godwit (Limosa fedoa)

Marbled Godwits are common migrants and winter visitors to our shores from breeding grounds in the interior of Canada and the northern prairies of the US. They look very similar year round, but the lack of dark bars on the underparts of this individual indicate it is in winter plumage. The long bill has a prehensile tip for grabbing worms deep in the mud as seen here. There are four godwits in the genus Limosa. The Marbled Godwit is the largest of the four. Two subspecies are recognized differing in size. This is probably the widespread nominate race L. f. fedoa. A rare smaller race, L. f. beringiae, breeds locally in Alaska and is believed to winter along the coast as far south of Northern California, but its status here is not certain. The two races overlap in weight. DNA evidence suggests that godwits are most closely related to curlews. The strong similarity in plumage between the Marbled Godwit and the Long-billed Curlew supports that classification.
Location
San Gregorio Beach, California, USA.
Date taken
11 November 2020
Scientific name
Limosa fedoa
Equipment used
Canon PowerShot SX60 HS
A very nicely focused and detailed behavioural shot, Joseph.
 
Staff member
Opus Editor
Supporter
Yeah LOL... if Curlews had a straight bill I'd be in a lot more trouble Joe!!

That's a splendid picture you've taken of this guy godwit my friend - thanks lad.
 

Media information

Category
North America
Added by
jmorlan
Date added
View count
214
Comment count
4

Share this media

Back
Top