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- American woodcock - Wikipedia
Although classified with the sandpipers and shorebirds in the family Scolopacidae, the American woodcock lives mainly in upland settings The population of the American woodcock has fallen by an average of slightly more than 1% annually since the 1960s
- American Woodcock Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of . . .
Superbly camouflaged against the leaf litter, the brown-mottled American Woodcock walks slowly along the forest floor, probing the soil with its long bill in search of earthworms
- American Woodcock | Audubon Field Guide
The American Woodcock is secretive but found in wet thickets, moist woods, and brushy swamps It favors a mix of forest and open fields, often spending days in the forest and nights in the open
- American Woodcock - eBird
Might be confused with Wilson’s Snipe, but woodcock is not nearly as dark and patterned Fairly common throughout eastern North America, but secretive and rarely seen well in daytime Always on the ground, except during well-known elaborate courtship display performed from dusk to dawn in spring
- Woodcock | Migration, Habitat Diet | Britannica
Woodcock, any of five species of squat-bodied, long-billed birds of damp, dense woodlands, allied to the snipes in the waterbird family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes)
- American Woodcock (Scolopax minor) | U. S. Fish Wildlife Service
Working with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people
- American Woodcock - American Bird Conservancy
The American Woodcock is the only member of its family native to North America, with seven other woodcock species occurring in Europe and Asia It is a short-distance migrant, moving from the northernmost parts of its range to the Atlantic coast and Gulf states each fall
- AMERICAN WOODCOCK - Pheasants Forever
Earthworms make up soils At dusk, the birds commute to a separate nearly 80% of the Woodcock’s diet with ants, flies, beetles, crickets, caterpillars, spiders and grasshoppers making up the remainder of their diet Woodcock forage for food by probing the soil with their bill
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