Subject: [Tweeters] Little Stint / Billy Frank Jr National Wildlife Refuge
Date: Mon Apr 25 23:37:44 PDT 2022
From: Robert O'Brien - baro at pdx.edu

One giveaway is the legs. Least Sandpiper has yellow legs, visible in the
photo. The Little Stint clearly has dark legs also visible in the
excellent photos.
I'd worry more about Western Sandpiper, which is the next excellent photo.
There are obvious differences there but the legs don't help.
Bob OBrien Portland
PS Can anyone predict what time of day (tidewise?) would be best
for chasing tomorrow, Tuesday? I guess it was seen around 9-10AM
Saturday. Little Stint is my Most Wanted Stint.................


On Mon, Apr 25, 2022 at 10:42 PM Steve Hampton <stevechampton at gmail.com>
wrote:


> I've only seen Little Stint a few times, so I'm interested in more

> discussion of this bird. The bill shape and overall posture seem identical

> to Least Sandpiper to me. Plumage-wise, is the strong streaking on the

> sides of the breast possible on Little Stint? I'm interested in an

> explanation why this is not a bright adult Least Sandpiper and what the key

> marks are.

>

> thanks,

>

>

>

> On Mon, Apr 25, 2022 at 6:58 PM dan&erika <danerika at gmail.com> wrote:

>

>> Hi Tweets--

>>

>> First let me apologize for the delay in my posting this record.

>> Yesterday, 25 April 2022, I photographed a bird at the Billy Frank Jr

>> National Wildlife Refuge. It was on the south side of the very beginning of

>> the estuary boardwalk. Two birds are in the image, one clearly a Least

>> Sandpiper. It slowly occurred to me that the other, brighter bird is a

>> Little Stint. I shared the photo with Dennis Paulson, who concurs with my

>> identification.

>>

>> Two photos are included in the following eBird checklist:

>> https://ebird.org/checklist/S107940245.

>>

>> Note apparent black legs, white-tipped wing coverts, and rusty breast,

>> and note the black streaks against a pale chestnut wash on the sides of the

>> breast and the chestnut color of the tertials.

>>

>> A refuge volunteer informed us that the shorebirds had been absent on

>> Saturday the 24th, but that a large fallout of shorebirds occurred on

>> Saturday night. I took the photos in eBird only because the birds presented

>> a pretty composition.

>>

>> Dan

>>

>> --

>> Dan or Erika Tallman

>> Olympia, Washington

>> danerika at gmail.com

>>

>> ".... the best shod travel with wet feet...Beware of all enterprises that

>> require new clothes ...."-;H. D. Thoreau

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>

>

> --

> ​Steve Hampton​

> Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)

>

>

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