Buff-breasted Sandpiper Calidris subruficollis Scientific name definitions
- NT Near Threatened
- Names (62)
- Monotypic
Text last updated November 10, 2017
Sign in to see your badges
Species names in all available languages
Language | Common name |
---|---|
Afrikaans | Taanborsstrandloper |
Arabic | دريجة برتقالية الصدر |
Asturian | Mazaricu roxu |
Basque | Txirri lepagorrizta |
Bulgarian | Жълтогръд дъждосвирец |
Catalan | territ rogenc |
Chinese | 黃胸鷸 |
Chinese (Hong Kong SAR China) | 飾胸鷸 |
Chinese (SIM) | 饰胸鹬 |
Croatian | žutonogi žalar |
Czech | jespák plavý |
Danish | Prærieløber |
Dutch | Blonde Ruiter |
English | Buff-breasted Sandpiper |
English (United States) | Buff-breasted Sandpiper |
Faroese | Roðagrælingur |
Finnish | tundravikla |
French | Bécasseau roussâtre |
French (France) | Bécasseau roussâtre |
French (Guadeloupe) | Bécasseau rousset |
Galician | Pilro canela |
German | Grasläufer |
Greek | Τρυγγίτης |
Haitian Creole (Haiti) | Bekasin savann |
Hebrew | חופית זהובת-גחון |
Hungarian | Cankópartfutó |
Icelandic | Grastíta |
Indonesian | Kedidi dada-abu |
Italian | Piro piro fulvo |
Japanese | コモンシギ |
Korean | 누른도요 |
Lithuanian | Gelsvakrūtis bėgikas |
Malayalam | ഉണ്ടക്കണ്ണൻ മണലൂതി |
Mongolian | Ухаа элсэг |
Norwegian | rustsnipe |
Polish | biegus płowy |
Portuguese (Brazil) | maçarico-acanelado |
Portuguese (Portugal) | Pilrito-acanelado |
Romanian | Fluierar cu piept gălbui |
Russian | Желтозобик |
Serbian | Žutogruda sprutka |
Slovak | pobrežník trávový |
Slovenian | Zlatar |
Spanish | Correlimos Canelo |
Spanish (Argentina) | Playerito Canela |
Spanish (Chile) | Playero canela |
Spanish (Costa Rica) | Praderito Pechianteado |
Spanish (Cuba) | Zarapico piquicorto |
Spanish (Dominican Republic) | Playero de Pecho Crema |
Spanish (Ecuador) | Praderito Canelo |
Spanish (Honduras) | Playero Pecho Ocre |
Spanish (Mexico) | Playero Ocre |
Spanish (Panama) | Playero Pechiacanelado |
Spanish (Paraguay) | Playerito canela |
Spanish (Peru) | Playero Acanelado |
Spanish (Puerto Rico) | Playero Canelo |
Spanish (Spain) | Correlimos canelo |
Spanish (Uruguay) | Playerito Canela |
Spanish (Venezuela) | Playerito Dorado |
Swedish | prärielöpare |
Turkish | Çayırkoşarı |
Ukrainian | Жовтоволик |
Calidris subruficollis (Vieillot, 1819)
Definitions
- CALIDRIS
- calidris
- subruficollis
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
Introduction
The Buff-breasted Sandpiper is among a group of shorebird species that defy preconceptions by preferring comparatively dry upland areas over wetlands, mudflats, and other habitats typical of waders. During migration and overwintering periods, in particular, use of agricultural lands suggests they are compatible with human-dominated landscapes, though this may also expose them to significant risks from agricultural chemicals and other changes in farming practices. A medium-sized shorebird, the Buff-breasted Sandpiper breeds sporadically along Arctic coastlines from central Alaska to Devon Island, Canada. It migrates through Canada, the central United States, and central South America to overwinter in Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil, where individuals frequent heavily-grazed grasslands and grasslands adjacent to wetlands. Northward migration proceeds through central South America, across the Gulf of Mexico, and northward along a narrow band in the eastern Great Plains before the birds reach the Arctic coast.
The Buff-breasted Sandpiper has an exploded lek mating-system that is unusual among shorebirds. Such leks are dispersed over a large area, with males defending relatively small territories that provide no resources for females and simply serve as display sites to attract females. After selecting a mate, the females then leave to nest and raise their chicks elsewhere. Unlike typical lekking systems, females do not show a strong preference for a few dominant males and will mate with solitary males that are not associated with leks.
Formerly abundant, this species decreased substantially in numbers owing to commercial hunting in the late 1800s and loss of habitat along its migratory route in both the Great Plains of North America and overwintering grounds in South America. The extreme tameness of the Buff-breasted Sandpiper and its tendency to return to a wounded flock member made this species especially vulnerable to hunting. During the later half of the 1900s, the species’ use of agricultural landscapes during migration and overwintering periods resulted in exposure to agricultural chemicals that proved to be especially toxic to birds and transformed the landscape through grazing and cultivation. Ongoing and projected changes in climate are especially severe in the coastal Arctic where the Buff-breasted Sandpiper breeds and present a significant threat to the species' future. Recent surveys on the migration corridor are documenting stopover sites, but it remains unclear whether the population is stable or continues to decline.