Home Gulls, Terns, Plovers, and allies - CHARADRIIFORMS Scolopacidae Greater Yellowlegs - Tringa melanoleuca
Greater Yellowlegs PDF Print E-mail

Greater Yellowlegs Tringa melanoleuca
L 14"(36 cm).

Song or calls:
Kyew-kyew-kyew.”

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photo by Phil Swanson

 

Description: Sexes similar. Long bright yellow legs are distinctive. Long, slightly upturned bill. Grayish-brown with black and white mottling above (paler in nonbreeding plumage); white below with dark streaking on neck and breast and barring on sides (less extensive streaking on neck and barring much paler or absent in nonbreeding plumage). Bill is somewhat broad at the base and about one and a half times as long as the head. In flight, look for pale spotting on inner primaries.

Bird Map
Habitat: Migrating birds can be found on ponds, marshes, creeks, mudflats, and flooded fields.

Where in Nebraska: Common spring and fall migrant across the state.

Fun Facts: Greater Yellowlegs breed in inhospitable and mosquito-ridden environments and live in low densities, making them one of the least studied birds.


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Similar Species

Lesser Yellowlegs

Willet

Solitary Sandpiper