SPOTTED SANDPIPER GALLERY
(Actitis macularius)
Here is how eBird describes the Spotted Sandpiper: Small shorebird. Constantly bobs its tail while working edges of streams, ponds, and lakes for invertebrates. Several individuals may be found at the same body of water, but never forms tight flocks. Underparts spotted in summer; plain in winter. Listen for two- or three-noted whistled call as they flush from shorelines. Distinctive wingbeats: snappy and below horizontal.
I saw my first Spotted Sandpiper at Crescent Bend Nature Park on April 17, 2020. The bird I saw that day was a breeding adult. I didn’t get a very good photo, but it is all I have for now!
On the mid-morning of September 29, 2020, I saw two juvenile Spotted Sandpipers at my waterfront on Lake McQueeney. Cute little birds!
On the morning of Monday, October 12, 2020, I was at River Acres Park in New Braunfels and sighted a Spotted Sandpiper near the edge of the Guadalupe River. I was very close to the bird and watched it for quite a while, getting some good photos.
Spotted Sandpiper “Cool Facts” From All About Birds…
- The Spotted Sandpiper is the most widespread breeding sandpiper in North America.
- Female Spotted Sandpipers sometimes practice an unusual breeding strategy called polyandry, where a female mates with up to four males, each of which then cares for a clutch of eggs. One female in Minnesota laid five clutches for three males in a month and a half. This odd arrangement does not happen everywhere and often they are monogamous, with the female pitching in to help a little.
- The female Spotted Sandpiper is the one who establishes and defends the territory. She arrives at the breeding grounds earlier than the male. In other species of migratory birds, where the male establishes the territory, he arrives earlier.
- The male takes the primary role in parental care, incubating the eggs and taking care of the young. One female may lay eggs for up to four different males at a time.
- Despite the gender roles, male Spotted Sandpipers have 10 times the testosterone that females have. However, that’s only in absolute terms. During the breeding season, females see a sevenfold increase in their testosterone levels, perhaps accounting for their aggression and the overall role reversal between male and female.
- The female may store sperm for up to one month. The eggs she lays for one male may be fathered by a different male in a previous mating.
- Its characteristic teetering motion has earned the Spotted Sandpiper many nicknames. Among them are teeter-peep, teeter-bob, jerk or perk bird, teeter-snipe, and tip-tail.
- The function of the teetering motion typical of this species has not been determined. Chicks teeter nearly as soon as they hatch from the egg. The teetering gets faster when the bird is nervous, but stops when the bird is alarmed, aggressive, or courting.
- The oldest recorded Spotted Sandpiper was a male, and at least 12 years old when he was recaught and rereleased during banding operations in New York.