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When a group of Turnstones took off to move further along the seashore, two of the birds seemed a little slow off the mark. They were a bit smaller and paler than the others so I quickly took a couple of pictures before they set off in pursuit of the main group. Looking at the pictures back at home, it soon became clear that these were two interlopers. Their identity was confirmed when I read in my book that "They (Purple Sandpipers) will also follow behind Turnstones and take food left behind after stones or algae have been flipped over". Photographs (above) - December 2003. A couple of months later, when a group of twenty or so Turnstones arrived, I took a closer look and, sure enough, there were the Purple Sandpipers again. Photographs (below) - February 2004. |
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All pictures will enlarge.
Click here for a video clip of some feeding Purple Sandpipers |
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