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Slender-billed Curlew (Numenius tenuirostris) - Wiki
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Curlews-Slender-billed Curlew (Numenius tenuirostris, center) and two Whimbrels.jpg
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Slender-billed Curlew (Numenius tenuirostris) - Wiki


Slender-billed Curlew
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] Slender-billed Curlew (center) and two Whimbrels (front and rear). aus: NAUMANN, NATURGESCHICHTE DER V??GEL MITTELEUROPAS: Band IX, Tafel 13 - Gera, 1902. From: http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/birds/1615_07.htm

The Slender-billed Curlew, Numenius tenuirostris, is a critically endangered, possibly extinct, bird in the wader family Scolopacidae. It breeds in marshes and peat bogs in the taiga of Siberia, and is migratory, formerly wintering in shallow freshwater habitats around the Mediterranean.

This species has occurred as a vagrant in western Europe, the Canary Islands, the Azores, Oman, Canada and Japan. The only time it was seen in North America was in Crescent Beach, Ontario, Canada.

Description
Appearance
The Slender-billed Curlew is a medium-sized curlew, 36???41 cm in length with a 77???88 cm wingspan. It is therefore about the same size as a Whimbrel, but it is more like the Eurasian Curlew in plumage. The breeding adult is mainly greyish brown above, with a whitish rump and lower back. The underparts are whitish, heavily streaked with dark brown. The flanks have round or heart-shaped spots. The non-breeding plumage is similar, but with fewer flank spots. Male and female are alike in plumage, but females are longer-billed than males, an adaptation in curlew species that avoids direct competition for food between the sexes. The juvenile plumage is very similar to the adult, but the flank are marked with brown streaking, the heart-shaped spots only appearing towards the end of the first winter.

Compared to the Eurasian Curlew, the Slender-billed Curlew is whiter on the breast, tail and underwing, and the bill is shorter, more slender, and slightly straighter at the base. The arrowhead-shaped flank spots of the Eurasian Curlew are also different from the round or heart-shaped spots of the Slender-billed. The head pattern, with a dark cap and whitish supercilium, recalls that of the Whimbrel, but that species also has a central crown stripe and a more clearly marked pattern overall; the pattern of the Slender-billed Curlew would be hard to make out in the field.

This species shows more white than other curlews, and the white underwings, along with the distinctive flank markings, are key identification criteria.

Vocalisations
The call is a cour-lee, similar to that of the Eurasian Curlew but higher-pitched, more melodic and shorter. The alarm call is a fast cu-ee.

Behaviour
Little is known about the breeding biology, but the few nests observed had an average four eggs.

Slender-billed Curlews feed by using their bills to probe soft mud for small invertebrates, but will also pick other small items off the surface if the opportunity arises. It used to be highly gregarious outside the breeding season, associating with related species, particularly Eurasian Curlews.

Status
After a long period of steady decline, the Slender-billed Curlew is extremely rare, with only a minute and still declining population. This is thought to be under 50 birds, with no more than two or three verified sightings in any year in the last five (as of 2007). As a result it is now listed as critically endangered, and is likely in the near future to be the first European bird to become extinct since the Great Auk, over 150 years ago. The primary cause of the decline is thought to be excessive hunting on the Mediterranean wintering grounds. Habitat loss, particularly in the wintering grounds, may also have played a part, but huge areas of forest bogs suitable for breeding still exist in Siberia.

The only well documented nest was found in 1924, near Tara in Omsk oblast, Siberia (57°N 74°E??? / ???57, 74). Its nesting grounds since then remain unknown, despite several intensive searches (not surprising, with over 100,000 square kilometres to search). The extent of its decline is also reflected in the absence of wintering birds at previously regular Moroccan sites.

More recently, twenty birds were recorded in Italy in 1995. Remarkably, there is also a single recent (4???7 May 1998) record of an immature (one year old) at Druridge Pools in Northumberland, England, for details of which see the Druridge Bay curlew.

Slender-billed Curlews have been reported in various Western Palearctic locations on a number of occasions since the Druridge bird, including claimed, but unverified, sightings of single birds from Italy and Greece; none have been documented with conclusive photographs and at least one claimed bird, at RSPB Minsmere, Suffolk, England in 2004, is now widely believed to have been a Eurasian Curlew.

Further sourced reports of the species were published in 2007, in British Birds magazine; the article stated, quoting from Zhmud:

During the last few years, small groups of birds have been found in the northern coastal areas [of the Danube Delta], frequenting low-lying islands, bays and sand-spits covered with Common Glasswort Salicornia europaea ... Four birds were present from 25th July to 21st August 2003, six were seen on 11th August 2004, and another on 12th August 2004.

Thus, there is some controversy over whether the species still exists, but given the extent of possible habitat and the precautionary principle, it is believed to be extant for the time being. The IUCN classifies it as Critically Endangered (CR) C2a(ii); D. This means that an estimated 50 mature birds or less are believed to exist, with numbers declining, and that there is probably only one subpopulation.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slender-billed_Curlew
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