Common Sandpiper

 Common Sandpiper



Size:21 cm

 Sewage ditches, waterlogged puddles, roadside gutters, ponds, lakes, rivers, lakes and sea shores - all of these places show the presence of small mulberries after the monsoon.  His homeland is the vast region from Britain to the whole of Europe, Russia and as far as the east coast of Siberia.  As the monsoon subsides we start coming there and reach small and big reservoirs around Diwali.  During the winter hardly any village is left without its presence.  In the crowdNo but loose single bulbs are found.  When the heat starts, he goes to his hometown to make a wreath.  In India only nest in Kashmir, Ladakh and Garhwal (Himalayas).

 The upper part of this ubiquitous bird of winter is greenish brown in color, the head and neck are light brown.  In the sun, a bronze tinge appears on the upper body, a light brown line above the eye.  Throat, chest and petals white, brown and white stripes above tail.  It is easy to distinguish it from other tutavaris due to the vertical white stripes running from the white wings to the shoulders.  When flying, a thin white stripe in the wing, horn-colored beak.  Legs greenish gray.  T.T.T.  The front body, including the head and neck, is often bent down.  His habit of repeatedly raising and lowering the tail and tail draws attention.  Males - females alike.  Food pests.


Habitat

 Titharis are also found in open and dry flat areas around water and fields, fresh water marshes, marshy edges of lakes, tillage fields and sandy or narrow river banks.  Yellow-footed and herd-dwelling tethers prefer dry habitat, while red-skinned tethers live in the waterlogged area, closely related to the water, and the raised winged tahtri, or coastal tetrahi.  The aquatic birds of this category have long body and legs, and wings are narrow.  The beaks of most species are narrow, but vary greatly in their size and length.The white-tailed Tithari (breeding in Baluchistan), the herd and gray-headed and the northern Tithari of Europe and Central Asia, migrate to South Asia to migrate in winter, while other Titharis are native to here.  Classification experts class the bulging feathers in the category of fast runners.

food

 In search of food, the squatters run a short run, stopping, standing upright and then bending them to the hunting beak, their flight is fast, powerful, straight, and fixed.  Their food consists of molluscs, insect worms and other small vertebrates as well as vegetation made of soft mud.

Trends

 Titharis are constantly alert to external attack and make noise as soon as they see the danger.  Noise of red-footed squirt is the loudest and loudest.  The Titharis pounce on the invader and get agitated around them, especially when the nest is close.  Newborns are kept in camouflage to protect them from predators.  When any hunter arrives, parents signal the chickens to pretend to die.  Other animals like fox also adopt the same technique.  Contexts of the crooked crocodile with embossed feathers entering the open jaws are controversial, but they may have leaked from the crocodile teeth and gums, but they have never been seen penetrating the mouth and crocodiles.  Has been found to be less inclined near or within the jaws of.  It cries out to warn the crocodile of the hunter's arrival.  Tithari has become an endangered species due to the disappearance of marshes and open fields, the eating of chicks, eggs, predators and traps, and pesticides and pollution.  Conservationists are making efforts to save the habitat of Tithari and to delineate the important role of other waterfowlers.  The most interesting thing about it is that it never sits on the tree.

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