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 Birds Search

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Search results for Gill Family containing SCOLOPACIDAE:Woodcocks,Snipes,Sandpipers,Phalaropes  
English NameScientific NameGerman NameSpanish Name
Eurasian WoodcockScolopax rusticolaWaldschnepfeChocha Perdiz
Amami Woodcock@Scolopax miraAmamischnepfeChocha de Amami
Rufous WoodcockScolopax saturataMalaienschnepfeChocha Oscura
Sulawesi Woodcock@Scolopax celebensisCelebesschnepfeChocha de Célebes
Moluccan Woodcock@Scolopax rochusseniiObischnepfeChcocha Moluqueña
Bukidnon Woodcock@Scolopax bukidnonensis  
American WoodcockScolopax minorKanadaschnepfeChocha Americana
Solitary SnipeGallinago solitariaEinsiedlerbekassineAgachadiza solitaria
Latham's SnipeGallinago hardwickiiJapanbekassineAgachadiza Japonesa
Wood SnipeGallinago nemoricolaNepalbekassineAgachadiza del Himalaya
Pintail SnipeGallinago stenuraSpießbekassineAgachadiza Colirrara
Swinhoe's SnipeGallinago megalaWaldbekassineAgachadiza del Baikal
Great SnipeGallinago mediaDoppelschnepfeAgachadiza Real
Common SnipeGallinago gallinagoBekassineAgachadiza Común
Wilson's SnipeGallinago delicataAmerikanische BekassineAgachadiza Americana
African SnipeGallinago nigripennisAfrikanische BekassineAgachadiza Africana
Madagascar Snipe@Gallinago macrodactylaMadagaskarbekassineAgachadiza Malgache
Magellanic SnipeGallinago paraguaiaeMagellanbekassineAgachadiza Suramericana
Puna SnipeGallinago andinaPunabekassineAgachadiza de Puna
Noble SnipeGallinago nobilisNobelbekassineAgachadiza Noble
Giant SnipeGallinago undulataRiesenbekassineAgachadiza Gigante
Andean SnipeGallinago jamesoniAndenbekassineAgachadiza Andina
Fuegian SnipeGallinago stricklandiiKordillerenbekassineAgachadiza Fuegina
Imperial SnipeGallinago imperialisKaiserbekassineAgachadiza Imperial
Jack SnipeLymnocryptes minimusZwergschnepfeAgachadiza Chica
Chatham Islands Snipe@Coenocorypha pusillaChathamschnepfeChochita de las Chatham
Subantarctic Snipe@Coenocorypha aucklandicaAucklandschnepfeChochita de las Auckland
North Island Snipe@+ Coenocorypha barrierensis   
South Island Snipe@+ Coenocorypha iredalei  
Snares Island Snipe@Coenocorypha huegeli  
Black-tailed GodwitLimosa limosaUferschnepfeAguja Colinegra
Hudsonian GodwitLimosa haemasticaHudsonschnepfeAguja Café
Bar-tailed GodwitLimosa lapponicaPfuhlschnepfeAguja Colipinta
Marbled GodwitLimosa fedoaMarmorschnepfeAguja Canela
Eskimo CurlewNumenius borealisEskimobrachvogelZarapito Esquimal
Little CurlewNumenius minutusZwergbrachvogelZarapito Chico
WhimbrelNumenius phaeopusRegenbrachvogelZarapito Trinador
Bristle-thighed CurlewNumenius tahitiensisBorstenbrachvogelZarapito del Pacifico
Slender-billed CurlewNumenius tenuirostrisDünnschnabel-BrachvogelZarapito Fino
Eurasian CurlewNumenius arquataGroßer BrachvogelZarapito Real
Long-billed CurlewNumenius americanusRostbrachvogelZarapito Americano
Far Eastern CurlewNumenius madagascariensisIsabellbrachvogelZarapito Siberiano
Upland SandpiperBartramia longicaudaPrärieläuferCorrelimos de Bartram
Spotted RedshankTringa erythropusDunkler WasserläuferArchibebe Oscuro
Common RedshankTringa totanusRotschenkelArchibebe Común
Marsh SandpiperTringa stagnatilisTeichwasserläuferArchibebe Fino
Common GreenshankTringa nebulariaGrünschenkelArchibebe Claro
Nordmann's GreenshankTringa guttiferTüpfelgrünschenkelArchibebe Moteado
Greater YellowlegsTringa melanoleucaGroßer GelbschenkelArchibebe Patigualdo Grande
Lesser YellowlegsTringa flavipesKleiner GelbschenkelArchibebe Patigualdo Chico
Solitary SandpiperTringa solitariaEinsamer WasserläuferAndarríos Solitario
Green SandpiperTringa ochropusWaldwasserläuferAndarríos Grande
Wood SandpiperTringa glareolaBruchwasserläuferAndarríos Bastardo
Wandering TattlerTringa incanaWanderwasserläuferPlayero de Alaska
Grey-tailed TattlerTringa brevipesGrauschwanz-WasserläuferPlayero Siberiano
Terek SandpiperXenus cinereusTerekwasserläuferAndarríos de Terek
Spotted SandpiperActitis maculariusDrosseluferläuferAndarríos Maculado
Common SandpiperActitis hypoleucosFlußuferläuferAndarríos Chico
WilletTringa semipalmataSchlammtreterPlayero Aliblanco
Sharp-billed Sandpiper@+Prosobonia cancellata  
Tuamotu Sandpiper@Prosobonia parvirostris  
Tahitian Sandpiper@+Prosobonia leucoptera Correlimos Batitú
Ellis's Sandpiper@+Prosobonia ellisi  
Ruddy TurnstoneArenaria interpresSteinwälzerVuelvepiedras Común
Black TurnstoneArenaria melanocephalaSchwarzkopf-SteinwälzerVuelvepiedras Oscuro
Short-billed DowitcherLimnodromus griseusKleiner SchlammläuferAgujeta Gris
Long-billed DowitcherLimnodromus scolopaceusGroßer SchlammläuferAgujeta Escolopacea
Asian DowitcherLimnodromus semipalmatusSteppenschlammläuferAgujeta Asiática
Great KnotCalidris tenuirostrisGroßer KnuttCorelimos Grande
SurfbirdCalidris virgataGischtläuferCorrelimos de Rompientes
Red KnotCalidris canutusKnuttCorrelimos Gordo
Spoon-billed SandpiperEurynorhynchus pygmeusLöffelstrandläuferCorrelimos Cuchareta
Red-necked StintEurynorhynchus ruficollisRotkehl-StrandläuferCorrelimos Cuellirojo
Pectoral SandpiperEurynorhynchus melanotosGraubrust-StrandläuferCorrelimos Pectoral
Curlew SandpiperErolia ferrugineaSichelstrandläuferCorrelimos Zarapatín
Long-toed StintNeopisobia subminutaLangzehen-StrandläuferCorrelimos Dedilargo
SanderlingEreunetes albusSanderlingCorrelimos Tridáctilo
Semipalmated SandpiperEreunetes pusillusSandstrandläuferCorrelimos Semipalmeado
Western SandpiperEreunetes mauriBergstrandläuferCorrelimos de Alaska
Little StintEreunetes minutusZwergstrandläuferCorrelimos Menudo
Least SandpiperEreunetes minutillusWiesenstrandläuferCorrelimos Menudillo
Stilt SandpiperEreunetes himantopusBindenstrandläuferCorrelimos Zancolin
White-rumped SandpiperEreunetes fuscicollisWeißbürzel-StrandläuferCorrelimos Culiblanco
Buff-breasted SandpiperTryngites subruficollisGrasläuferCorrelimos Canelo
Baird's SandpiperTryngites bairdiiBairdstrandläuferCorrelimos de Baird
Temminck's StintPelidna temminckiiTemminckstrandläuferCorrelimos de Temminck
Purple SandpiperPelidna maritimaMeerstrandläuferCorrelimos Oscuro
Rock SandpiperPelidna ptilocnemisBeringstrandläuferCorrelimos Roquero
DunlinPelidna alpinaAlpenstrandläuferCorrelimos Común
Sharp-tailed SandpiperLimicola acuminataSpitzschwanz-StrandläuferCorrelimos Acuminado
Broad-billed SandpiperLimicola falcinellusSumpfläuferCorrelimos Falcinelo
RuffPhilomachus pugnaxKampfläuferCombatiente
Wilson's PhalaropePhalaropus tricolorWilsonwassertreterFalaropo Tricolor
Red-necked PhalaropePhalaropus lobatusOdinshühnchenFalaropo Picofino
Red PhalaropePhalaropus fulicariusThorshühnchenFalaropo Picogrueso

 Help with Searching

My work on birds is carried out in a huge database, where I can have all records open at once. However, converting details on over 10,000 species of birds at once into html is not possible, so the information in my database can be accessed via a search engine, or by going to a family group.

Here is some advice on searching. You may like to try the examples cited below to get experience with searching.

You can search on Scientific Name (for example, “Rallus longirostris”); or on English Name (for example, “Clapper Rail”); or on French Name “Râle gris”; or German Name (for example, “Klapperralle”); or Spanish Name (for example “Rascón Piquilargo”). You can search on only one of these at a time. If the search finds a unique match, it will display full details of the species. Note that some of the fields, which may contain large amounts of information, require you to click on a “Click to see full text” to view the information in a separate window.

If the search finds more than one match, it will display all species that match the search term. For example, if you type just “Rallus” against Scientific Name, the detail of all birds in the genus Rallus will be displayed. You are warned against typing a search term that will produce hundreds of records, such as “Flycatcher” under English Name, as the resulting list may overwhelm your computer’s memory.

If you enter a search term under English Synonym ( for example, “Little Cassowary”), if the search finds a unique match, it will display the details of the species to which this name relates (in this case “Dwarf Cassowary” Casuarius bennettii). If the search term finds more than one match among English Synonyms, it will display all species that have a match with the search term ( for example, try just “Cassowary”. This will list all species that have an English synonym that includes the word “Cassowary”.)

You can also search by Scientific Synonym. For example, if you type “Scolopax obscura”, the following record will be displayed:
Scolopax obscura S.G.Gmelin,1784,Reise durch Russland zur Untersuchung der drey Reiche,3,p.90,pl.17. (Shore of Caspian Sea). (= R.a.aquaticus)

The search may retrieve more than one record. For example, if you search for “Rallus gularis”, you will get both the following records:
Rallus gularis Horsfield,1821,Transactions of the Linnaean Society of London,13,pt.1,p.196.(Java.), which is the basis of Gallirallus striatus gularis; and
Rallus gularis Lesson(ex Cuvier MS),”1831”,Traité d'Ornithologie(1830),p.536. (Madagascar). Not Rallus gularis of Horsfield,1821. (= D.c.cuvieri), which is a synonym, though not available because it is pre-occupied, of Dryolimnas cuvieri cuvieri.

Of course if you use a single word as a search term, such as “Hypotaenidia”, your search will produce all synonyms containing this term.

You should be aware that I have reproduced exactly the name as it was cited by the original author. For example, Gallirallus was originally proposed by Lafresnaye,1841 as “Galli-rallus”. And the ligature “æ” was widely used before the twentieth century, as in “Anser cærulescens Bonnaterre,1790”.
I am in the process of going through my file and replacing all instances of spelling which deviate from the modern spelling with, for example, “Gallirallus [as Galli-rallus] Lafresnaye,1841”.
Another problem is that where a citation has abbreviated the name, the abbreviated portions of the name are reproduced in brackets. For example, in G. R. Gray, 1844-49, the genus was abbreviated to the first letter; thus we find C[achinna] herpetotheres.

If you enter a term under Generic Name, if a unique match is found, it should display a single record. For example, if you enter “Rallus”, the following will be displayed:
Rallus Linnaeus,1758,Systema Naturae....editio decima,tom.1,pars 1,p.153.Type,by subsequent designation (Fleming,1821,Memoirs of the Wernerian Natural History Society,3,p.176.),Rallus aquaticus Linnaeus,1758.

Note that this is case-sensitive, for example if you type Rallus, the citation for “Gallirallus” will not be displayed, nor that for “Laterallus”.

Since my checklist is extensively annotated, this search will also display any notes that apply to a generic name. For example, if you searched for “Lyrurus”, the following will be produced:
Lyrurus Swainson,”1831”,in Swainson & Richardson,Fauna Boreali-Americana,2(1832),p.497.Type,by original designation,Tetrao tetrix Linnaeus,1758.
Note!:Madge & McGowan,2002,Pheasants,Partridges and Grouse,p.368 resurrect Lyrurus as a genus:"Though often absorbed within Tetrao,the two species of black grouse form a distinctive pair...both Lyrurus have quite ornate,peculiarly twisted tails and
(ctd!) indulge in communal lekking, which differs considerably from the often solitary "popping" of forest-living capercaillies."

Searching for a Subgeneric name is similar. For example, if you enter “Tricholimnas”, you will get:
Tricholimnas Sharpe,1893,Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club,1,p.28.Type,by original designation,Tricholimnas lafresnayanus (Verreaux) = Gallirallus lafresnayanus J. Verreaux & Des Murs,1860.
And as is usual with subgeneric names, a following note:
Note>:Tricholimnas contains only G.lafresnayanus.

Finally, you can search on Generic or Subgeneric Synonym. If you type “Nesolimnas”, you will get:
Nesolimnas Andrews,1896,Novitates Zoologicae,3,pp.260,266.Type,by monotypy,Rallus dieffenbachii G.R.Gray,1843. (= Hypotaenidea)
The entry on brackets indicates that this is a synonym of the subgeneric name Hypotaenidea.

Note that such searches will not infrequently produce more than one result. This will include cases where a name was originally cited as a Nomen nudum (that is, no type species was designated), and later cited with a valid type species. It will also include cases of Homonyms, where the later name will be marked “Not….”.

If you have any further queries, please email jpenhall@bigpond.net.au