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4 species recorded [3 extant native, 1 vagrant] Grebes are small to medium-large freshwater diving birds. They have lobed toes and are excellent swimmers and divers. However, they have their feet placed far back on the body, making them quite ungainly on land. Three species have been regularly recorded in Australia, and a fourth is a vagrant.
A – rare vagrant Garganey (Spatula querquedula) A – breeding summer visitor Blue-winged teal (Spatula discors) A – rare vagrant Shoveler (Spatula clypeata) A – resident breeder and winter visitor Gadwall (Mareca strepera) A & C – resident breeder and winter visitor Falcated duck (Mareca falcata) A – rare vagrant Wigeon (Mareca penelope)
Vagrant Curlew sandpiper: Calidris ferruginea: Near threatened Temminck's stint: Calidris temminckii: Vagrant Long-toed stint: Calidris subminuta: Vagrant Red-necked stint: Calidris ruficollis: Vagrant; near threatened Sanderling: Calidris alba: Dunlin: Calidris alpina: Vagrant Baird's sandpiper: Calidris bairdii: Vagrant Little stint: Calidris ...
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A native of most European countries and West Asia, it reaches as far north as Scandinavia and beyond the Arctic Circle, frequenting cornfields and their neighbourhoods. It is an uncommon vagrant in spring, and particularly autumn, to the British Isles. Sightings in the UK are less common than they were, owing to the species' population decline ...
It migrates mainly by day, often in large flocks. Lowland breeders in westernmost areas of Europe are resident. It occasionally is a vagrant to North America, especially after storms, as in the Canadian sightings after storms in December 1927 and in January 1966. [11] A northern lapwing mobbing a Western marsh harrier near its nest