birding-aus

Waders, their bills, on the breeding grounds

To: 'BIRDING-AUS' <>
Subject: Waders, their bills, on the breeding grounds
From: Sav Saville <>
Date: Wed, 01 Oct 2008 11:24:51 +1300
Hi all,

Just to throw the cat among the pigeons a little....

Here in New Zealand, Wrybills are bill-adapted for the breeding grounds
(where they forage for larvae around pebbles in braided river beds) and
certainly not for their wintering estuarine habitat where the bent bill is
presumably a disadvantage.

Cheers,


Sav Saville
Wrybill Birding Tours, NZ
"Great birds, real birders"

24 Puketiro Drive
Feilding
New Zealand
+64 6 323 1441

www.wrybill-tours.com



-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of L&L Knight
Sent: 01 October 2008 01:01
To: Jill Dening
Cc: birding-aus
Subject: Waders, their bills, on the breeding grounds

I'll rephrase my answer.  Why treat waders as a homogenous group?  Is
it likely that a tendency that applies to plovers is likely to apply
to phalaropes, tattlers, knots, godwits, stints, sandpipers and stilts
as well?  The degree of divergence between breeding and wintering
grounds will vary widely.

Perhaps you should distinguish between waders with highly specialised
bills and waders with generalist bills.  You have already made an
implied distinction between migratory waders and non-migratory
waders.  I suspect you have also distinguished between short distance
migrants [like Double-Banded Plovers] and inter-hemispherical migrants.

LK

On 30/09/2008, at 9:08 PM, Jill Dening wrote:

> Yes, I know that, Laurie, but it doesn't help me to answer the
> question. In fact that's why the question was asked in the first
> place. It may be as Bruce thinks, that the bill length is only
> advantageous in the wintering grounds.
>
> A further question might be: I wonder if any of the bill lengths
> pose a restriction on the breeding grounds? I could imagine a bill
> as long as that of the Eastern Curlew might limit how prey can be
> taken, if probing is not the manner of feeding. And I have the
> strong impression that food is taken quite differently (from
> probing) on the breeding grounds.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Jill
>  Jill Dening
> Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia
>
> 26° 51' 41"S  152° 56' 00"E
>
>
> L&L Knight wrote:
>>
>> The breeding grounds vary somewhat between species.  Some breed in
>> the tundra or on mountain ridges - environments that are nothing
>> like the habitats they winter in down here.
>>
>> Regards, Laurie.
>>
>> On 30/09/2008, at 7:59 PM, Jill Dening wrote:
>>
>>> Hi All,
>>>
>>> I was recently asked a question about waders which totally fazed
>>> me. I was asked if the length of the bill of different species of
>>> wader is of any advantage on the breeding grounds.
>>>
>>

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