Snipe
This article is about the Snipe Bird. For other meanings see Snipe.
| Snipe | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Common Snipe | ||||||||||
| Scientific classification | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| † see also: wader |
These are birds of marshy areas which often crouch motionless when disturbed until exploding away when almost underfoot.
They search for invertebrates in the mud with a "sewing-machine" action of their long bills.
Most have distinctive displays, usually given at dawn or dusk.
There are two southern snipe species in the genus Coenocorypha, 15 typical snipe in the genus Gallinago, and the very small Jack Snipe, Lymnocryptes minimus.
Species are:
- Family: Scolopacidae (part)
- Chatham Snipe, Coenocorypha pusilla
- Subantarctic Snipe, Coenocorypha aucklandica
- Jack Snipe, Lymnocryptes minimus
- Solitary Snipe, Gallinago solitaria
- Latham's Snipe, Gallinago hardwickii
- Wood Snipe, Gallinago nemoricola
- Pintail Snipe, Gallinago stenura
- Swinhoe's Snipe, Gallinago megala
- African Snipe, Gallinago nigripennis
- Madagascar Snipe, Gallinago macrodactyla
- Great Snipe, Gallinago media
- Common Snipe, Gallinago gallinago
- The American race, G. g. delicata is sometimes considered a separate species, Wilson's Snipe.
- South American Snipe, Gallinago paraguaiae
- Noble Snipe, Gallinago nobilis
- Giant Snipe, Gallinago undulata
- Fuegian Snipe, Gallinago stricklandii
- Andean Snipe, Gallinago jamesoni
- Imperial Snipe, Gallinago imperialis
