Long-billed Curlew Images, Facts and Information:
Numenius americanus
- Long-billed Curlews are large, buffy brown shorebirds with very long, down curved bills, long legs with plain crowns.
- Long-billed Curlews are North America’s largest shorebird.
- The bills of female Long-billed Curlews are longer and more curved than the males.
- Long-billed Curlews are migratory. Their preferred habitat during the breeding season includes shortgrass and mixed grass prairies, agricultural fields along with marshes and playas in the Great Basin. Their preferred habitat during the winter includes coastal areas of the southern U.S along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
- Long-billed Curlews eat insects, marine invertebrates, marine crustaceans that include worms, shrimp, crabs, grasshoppers, beetles, spiders and caterpillars. They will occasionally eat small mammals.
- Long-billed Curlews lay 3 to 5 eggs which take 27 to 30 days to hatch. Both sexes incubate and they are monogamous.
- One nickname for Long-billed Curlews is “Candlestick Birds” because of the resemblance between candlesticks and their bills the other is “sicklebird” for the same reason.
- A group of curlews can be called a “game”, “salon”, “curfew” or “skein” of curlews.
- Long-billed Curlews can live up to 8 years.
I hope you enjoy viewing my Long-billed Curlew photos.
Long-billed Curlew Kick Boxing
Title: Long-billed Curlew Kick Boxing
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlews flashing their underwings
Title: Long-billed Curlews flashing their underwings
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Battling Long-billed Curlews
Title: Battling Long-billed Curlews
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlews exhibiting territorial aggression
Title: Long-billed Curlews exhibiting territorial aggression
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew Territorial Encounter
Title: Long-billed Curlew Territorial Encounter
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew territorial skirmish
Title: Long-billed Curlew territorial skirmish
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew Wing-raising behavior
Title: Long-billed Curlew Wing-raising behavior
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Aggressive behavior in Long-billed Curlews
Title: Aggressive behavior in Long-billed Curlews
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlews getting physical
Title: Long-billed Curlews getting physical
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew Appeasement behavior
Title: Long-billed Curlew Appeasement behavior
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlews fighting on territory
Title: Long-billed Curlews fighting on territory
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew territorial display
Title: Long-billed Curlew territorial display
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Long-billed Curlew on a Bison Poop Perch
Title: Long-billed Curlew on a Bison Poop Perch
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
Male Long-billed Curlews fighting on their breeding grounds
Title: Male Long-billed Curlews fighting on their breeding grounds
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/13/2012
The female Curlew wasn’t receptive
Title: The female Curlew wasn’t receptive
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012
The male Long-billed Curlew gives it one last try
Title: The male Long-billed Curlew gives it one last try
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012
The female Long-billed Curlew ignores the male’s advances
Title: The female Long-billed Curlew ignores the male’s advances
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012
The male Curlew keeps trying to court the female
Title: The male Curlew keeps trying to court the female
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012
Male Curlew ruffling the tail-coverts of the female
Title: Male Curlew ruffling the tail-coverts of the female
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012
Male Long-billed Curlew following the female
Title: Male Long-billed Curlew following the female
Location: Antelope Island State Park, Davis County, Utah
Date: 4/2/2012