Recurvirostra americana
SUBFAMILY
Recurvirostrinae
TAXONOMY
Recurvirostra americana Gmelin, 1789, North America. Monotypic.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
French: Avocette d’Amйrique; German: Braunhals-Sдbelschnдbler;
Spanish: Avoceta Americana, Piqocurvo.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
16.1–2.0 in (41–51 cm); 10.6–16.2 oz (302–461 g). Large, striking
birds legs bluish, strongly upcurved black bill. The only avocet
with annual color change, the head, neck, and breast
change from gray to orange-brown in breeding season. Wings
and back black, contrasting with white on wing coverts. Sexes
similar in plumage, male often larger, bill shorter and more
strongly recurved in female. Juvenile resembles adult but
crown pale brown with dull chestnut nape and hindneck.
DISTRIBUTION
Southeastern British Columbia east to southwestern Ontario,
south to northern Baja California east to central Texas, eastern
United States, and central Mexico. Winters from California
and south, Texas through Mexico to Guatemala and irregularly
to northern Honduras, southeastern United States and Bahamas
to Cuba.
HABITAT
Specializes in using ephemeral wetlands of arid western United
States, breeds around sparsely vegetated saline lakes and ponds,
in large numbers at marshes of Great Salt Lake, Tulare Basin
of California and across northern Great Basin. Outside of
breeding season occurs in freshwater habitats and coastal lagoons
and estuaries.
BEHAVIOR
After flock arrives at breeding grounds, transition from flocking
to territoriality. Territory defended by male and female.
“Upright posture,” where the bird faces its opponent with neck
extended vertically, is used to threaten other birds.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Mostly feeds on aquatic invertebrates while wading or swimming,
also crustaceans, worms, small fish, and seeds. Scything
Resident
Himantopus novaezelandiae
Nonbreeding
is hallmark method, but also pecks, plunges, and snatches. Will
forage in dense flocks.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Monogamous, though pair bond doesn’t usually extend past
one season. Semi-colonial nesting, nest is a grass-lined depression
in soil. Usually four eggs, incubation 22–29 days by both
sexes. Both adults care for chicks, fledging four to five weeks.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened. Before 1900s shooting and trapping led to
population declines, particularly on the Atlantic coast. Many
wetlands used by American avocets in western United States
have been contaminated with selenium as a result of irrigation
and other human activities, loss of wetland habitat has led to
population declines. Operators of selenium-contaminated
ponds in California’s Tulare Basin now required to provide
mitigation habitat for breeding recurvirostrids, and species response
has been favorable.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Considerend a game bird in early 1900s in California.
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