WILLET GALLERY
(Tringa semipalmata)

eBird offers this description of the Willet:  Large shorebird most often seen towering above Sanderlings on coastal beaches. Bill is relatively thick and longer than the head. Plain gray overall with more barring in summer. Very distinctive black-and-white wing pattern. Bluish-gray legs. Two subspecies; “Eastern” breeds in saltmarshes along East Coast of U.S.; “Western” breeds in marshy grasslands in the Interior West.

I saw and photographed the Willet at Bolivar Flats on the evening of May 21, 2020. 

A Willet at Bolivar Flats, May 21, 2020.
A Willet, photographed from a little farther away. Bolivar Flats, May 21, 2020.


“Cool Facts” About the Willet From All About Birds

  • Although both parents incubate the eggs, only the male Willet spends the night on the nest.
  • Like Killdeer, Willets will pretend to be disabled by a broken wing in order to draw attention to themselves and lure predators away from their eggs or chicks.
  • Because they find prey using the sensitive tips of their bills, and not just eyesight, Willets can feed both during the day and at night.
  • Willets breeding in the interior of the West differ from the Atlantic Coastal form in ecology, shape, and subtly in calls. Western Willets breed in freshwater habitats, and are slightly larger and paler gray. Eastern Willets have stouter bills and more barring on their chest and back. The difference in pitch between the calls of the two subspecies is very difficult for a person to detect, but the birds can hear the difference and respond more strongly to recorded calls of their own type.
  • Willets and other shorebirds were once a popular food. In his famous Birds of America accounts, John James Audubon wrote that Willet eggs were tasty and the young “grow rapidly, become fat and juicy, and by the time they are able to fly, afford excellent food.” By the early 1900s, Willets had almost vanished north of Virginia. The Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 banned market hunting and marked the start of the Willet’s comeback.
  • The oldest known Willet in North America was a female and banded in Oregon. She was at least 10 years, 3 months old when she was found in California.