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 Common
Snipe
The Common Snipe is primarily a bird of open freshwater
marshes, bogs, wet meadows, and the northern tundra
during the breeding season. There they feed in water up
to their bellies or probe into soft mud with their long
bills for food. Their bills are hard-tipped, but
otherwise highly sensitive and flexible so that they can
curve their upper mandible and raise it to capture
earthworms and other subterranean prey. Insects make up
about half of their food. The remainder consists of
crustaceans such as crayfish, crabs, and daphnia,
earthworms, leeches, spiders, some small vertebrates, and
seeds. Snipes forage in fairly dense low marsh vegetation
or in plowed fields, and only sparingly on mud flats.
When not feeding, they can be hard to see while they rest
motionless for long periods.
The female selects a nest site concealed by vegetation,
and lines a scrape on the ground with short grasses,
leaves, or moss. She may incorporate a roof of
overhanging plants. She lays three or four spotted eggs.
Although the male does not contribute to nest
construction or incubation, he shares in the care of the
precocial young, who leave the nest as soon as their down
is dry. Sometimes the female cares for part of the brood
and the male cares for the rest. They fledge at about 20
days.
Males are famous for their aerial displays performed not
only during courtship, but also over the nest and even at
times during migration and winter. Males circle several
hundred feet up in the sky on rapidly beating wings, then
produce an ethereal rhythmically pulsing musical sound
while plunging earthward at about a 45 degree angle. The
sound is produced by the passage of air over the
outermost tail feathers, which the male holds out at
right angles to the body. The sound seems to rise and
fall as he repeats the performance in flight,
roller-coaster fashion. At other times snipes call with a
repetitive "chip-per, chip-per, chip-per,"
around the nest. They sometimes call from fence posts or
trees.
During the breeding season Common Snipes are found across
Canada and south in the United States through New
England, New York, Michigan, the northern Great Plains
and through the Rocky Mountains and Pacific Northwest. In
winter they are common throughout the South and West, but
some migrate as far as the Lesser Antilles and South
America. They also occur across Europe and Asia,
wintering in southern Europe, Southeast Asia and Africa.
Although still locally common, formerly abundant North
American populations were decimated by market hunting
before the late 1900s.
Common
Snipe Range Map
Description: Common Snipes are stocky,
medium-sized sandpipers with short legs and very long
straight bills (twice the length of the head). Only
dowitchers and woodcocks are similar in shape, but they
are easily distinguished by plumage pattern. Common
Snipes have generally warm brown upperparts that are
prominently marked on their heads and backs with pale
longitudinal stripes. The short rounded tail is orange
and the belly is white, contrasting with the dark chest
and undertail area. Woodcocks are plumper, marked with
crosswise bars on the head and have larger heads and more
rounded wings. Dowitchers are more similarly shaped, but
lack the snipe's very prominent stripes. Sexes are alike,
and there is very little change in the plumage with age
or season.
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