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  The Spotted Sandpiper  
 "Across the narrow beach we flit,
	 One little sandpiper and I
	 And fast I gather, bit by bit
	 The scattered driftwood, bleached and dry."
       -- Celia Thaxter
   
      
    The Spotted Sandpiper (Actitus macularia) is a small bird of
    7 to 8 inches in length which, with tail wagging, teeters as it perches
    on branches, or walks on ground, logs, or rocks. It is not fussy as are
    most of its fascinating tribe. Sandy shores, rocky coasts, mud flats,
    plowed fields, or golf courses are all attractive to these waders. Not as
    gregarious as other sandpipers, it does not gather in great flocks, but
    trips alone, teetering as it goes as if too delicately balanced. Many other
    shore birds are streaked, but this species is the only one with round,
    black spots like a thrush. The wing stroke is shallow, fast quivering, with
    a stiff bowed appearance. As they fly, they utter a sharp peet-weet call.
    A distinctive characteristic for identification is the constant teetering
    while walking.
       
   
      
    In late April and May their shrill peet-weet can be heard overhead in the
    night sky, often the first sign that the "spotties" are back. When they
    arrive, the scrappy males fight with each other like little roosters until
    their affairs are settled and nesting begins.
   
      
    The nest is a depression in the ground among the weeds or under a bush with
    no lining; or some may be well lined with grass or weeds. There are four
    spotted, pear-shaped eggs, the small ends usually lying together as in the
    design of a four-leaf clover. Because of their protective color of creamy
    white with dark splotches, they are hard to see among the stones, pebbles,
    or dried vegetation. Both sexes incubate, and after fifteen to sixteen days,
    the most appealing babies hatch. They dry out in less than half an hour,
    becoming soft and fluffy, and are able to run around with their parents.
    At the least sign of danger they hide immediately.
   
      
    In FIELDBOOK OF NATURAL HISTORY, Dr. E. Laurence Palmer says the following
    about their diet: "Food (consists) of small animal matter, chiefly insects,
    including army worms, grasshoppers, caterpillars, cutworms, cabbage worms,
    beetles and grubs." He concludes, ". . . entirely useful. Protected by law
    and worthy of even more protection through the southern part of its range."
   
      
    In late summer, the young of the spotted sandpiper look very much like their
    parents, being olive-brown (bronzy, one author calls it) above and whitish
    below, with white eyebrows. Like their parents at this time of year, they
    have no spots, for the breeding plumage of the adults has been molted for
    a less distinctive garb. Individually they wander up and down the shores
    and elsewhere, dining on all sorts of insects, crustaceans, small fish, and
    other tiny creatures that infest the shorelines.
   
      
    The spotted sandpiper is an early migrant, some of them reaching Mexico and
    South America by the end of July. Others do not leave the northern beaches
    until early October. Winter finds them scattered from the warm beaches of
    the south Atlantic and gulf states and coast of California, down to Bolivia
    and southern Brazil.
   
       -- by Marie L. Atkinson
 
 REFERENCES:
  Field Guide to Western Birds
  Roger Tory Peterson
 
  
  National Geographic
  Olin Sewall Pettingill, Jr.
 
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