Greater Yellowlegs Images, Facts and Information:
Tringa melanoleuca
- Greater Yellowlegs are a medium sized shorebird with long yellow legs, long necks, white rumps and tails and long slightly decurved bills.
- Greater Yellowlegs habitat during breeding season includes tundra, wet bogs, marshes and muskegs. During the winter they are found along the coasts, lakeshores, marshes, pools and mudflats.
- They breed in southern Canada to Alaska.
- Greater Yellowlegs are migratory and spend winters the southeast and southwest U.S., California, Mexico, the Caribbean, Central and South America.
- The diet of Greater Yellowlegs includes small terrestrial and aquatic invertebrates, insects, frogs, seeds, berries and small fish.
- Greater Yellowlegs lay 3 to 4 eggs which take 23 days to hatch. Both sexes incubate.
- A group of yellowlegs is called an “incontinence”.
I hope you enjoy viewing my Greater Yellowlegs photos.
Mia McPherson
Greater Yellowlegs at dawn
Title: Greater Yellowlegs at dawn
Location: Fort De Soto County Park, Pinellas County, Florida
Date: 8/17/2008
Mia McPherson
An alert Greater Yellowlegs at Fort De Soto’s north beach
Title: An alert Greater Yellowlegs at Fort De Soto’s north beach
Location: Fort De Soto County Park, Pinellas County, Florida
Date: 8/6/2008