| Query: Gray-tailed tattler | Result: 17th of 18 | |
wandering tattler (Tringa incana)
Subject: | wandering tattler (Tringa incana)
| Poster: | Wiki Photos (---@---.---)
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Resolution: 1089x786
File Size: 586133 Bytes
Date: 2009:12:23 10:51:16
Camera: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XSi (Canon)
F number: f/5.6
Exposure: 1/800 sec
Focal Length: 300/1
Upload Date: 2017:04:10 10:16:15
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Wandering Tattler Tringa incana, Pillar Point, California
Date 23 December 2009, 10:51
Source Wandering Tattler
Author Jason Crotty https://www.flickr.com/people/46789814@N05
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tringa_incana,_Pillar_Point,_California_3.jpg
The wandering tattler (Tringa incana) (formerly Heteroscelus incanus), is a medium-sized wading bird. It is similar in appearance to the closely related gray-tailed tattler, T. brevipes. The tattlers are unique among the species of Tringa for having unpatterned, greyish wings and backs, and a scaly breast pattern extending more or less onto the belly in breeding plumage, in which both also have a rather prominent supercilium.
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Scolopacidae
Genus: Tringa
Species: Tringa incana (Gmelin, 1789)
Synonyms:
Heteractitis incanus
Heteroscelus incanus
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Scientific Name: Tringa incana (Gmelin, 1789)
Common Names: Wandering Tattler, Wandering (Alaskan) Tattler
French: Chevalier errant; German: Wanderwasserläufer; Spanish: Playero de Alaska
Taxonomy: Scolopax incana J. F. Gmelin, 1789, Moorea (Eimeo), Society Group, Pacific Ocean.
Synonyms:
Heteroscelus incanus (Gmelin, 1789)
Tringa incana Turbott (1990)
Tringa incana Sibley and Monroe (1990, 1993)
Tringa incana AOU checklist (1998 + supplements)
Tringa incana Christidis and Boles (2008) |
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