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News: Shorebirds

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The Peregrine Chick:
For folks wanting to know a bit more detail, Cornell's All About Birds site is a good reference:
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Whimbrel/id

birdcamfan:
Thank you. I had never heard of this type of bird before and was interested in what size this bird is. I looked it up and they are a medium sized bird (large for a wader) of 15 to 18 inches. Hard to believe how far they can go!

Kinderchick:
Great story! Thanks for posting, Cathy! :) Hopefully, Chinquapin didn't survive, just to be eaten by a raptor! ;)

Saoirse:
What a terrific good news story! Thanks for finding it, Cathy179 -- and for posting it, TPC! Look forward to hearing more from you in the future, Cathy179.  :D

The Peregrine Chick:
Nunavut shorebird flies through Hurricane Irene - and survives
Nunatsiaq News / 30 August 2011

A plucky shorebird on its way south from Nunavut’s Southampton Island made headlines this week in the United States when it survived a flight through Hurricane Irene, the same storm that caused New York City to shut down for a day.

Whimbrels are long-beaked brown shorebirds, which spend their summers in Nunavut where they seek out wet lowlands and shores.

Nine days ago, on Aug. 22 a whimbrel – dubbed Chinquapin by the team that tagged the bird in 2010 — started off Aug. 22 on his annual, 4,000-plus kilometre journey to the mouth of the Amazon in Brazil, traveling at speeds of up to 80 km an hour.

Chinquapin’s travels have been tracked since May, 2010, when researchers in the southern U.S. fitted him with a tiny radio transmitter.

Since then, biologists at the Center for Conservation Biology in Virginia have been following Chinquapin’s path — and they were nervous last Wednesday when the bird flew right through the dangerous northeast section of the hurricane.

But on Saturday, their tracking showed Chinquapin was resting on Eleuthera Island in the Caribbean.

Whimbrels are “capable of really amazing migration flights” of up to 5,600 km without a rest, according to Bryan Watts, director of the College of William and Mary’s Center for Conservation Biology.

“[But] it’s sort of bad to hit a big storm at the end of a flight that long,” Watts told USA Today.

Before Chinquapin set off from Nunavut, he had likely doubled his weight, which helped provide him with enough energy to fly through the hurricane.

But it’s still a mystery to biologists how Chinquapin managed to stay his course: other migratory birds have been known to die or lose their way when travelling through a storm like Hurricane Irene, with its winds of 175 km/h.

In 2010 this same bird flew around Tropical Storm Colin while a second bird flew into the storm and did not survive.


Nunatsiaq Online - Nunavut shorebird flies through Hurricane Irene and survives

(and thanks to Cathy179 for finding this story)

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