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British Birds - Dippers, Divers and Sandpipers
Here is the largest European wading bird but do you recognise it?

British Birds - Dippers, Divers and Sandpipers

From river-loving dippers to shoreline sandpipers, these birds are built for water. Explore habitats, feeding styles, and flight clues, then try the quiz below.

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Fascinating Fact:

Dipper nests are domed and mossy, and are often built close to water, sometimes on man-made structures like bridges and weirs.

In Specialist Nature, identifying birds often comes down to matching behaviour to habitat. Dippers are compact river birds that forage along fast-flowing streams, divers are powerful swimmers built for catching fish underwater, and sandpipers are waders that pick food from mud, sand, and shallow water. Look for clues like where the bird feeds, how it moves, and the shape of its bill and body.

  • Wader: A bird with long legs that feeds in shallow water or wet ground, often by picking insects and small animals from the surface.
  • Dive-feeding: Finding food underwater by swimming below the surface, usually to catch fish or aquatic insects.
  • Field marks: The visible features that help you identify a bird, such as size, colour pattern, wing shape, and bill type.
How do you identify a dipper in the UK?

A UK dipper is a small, dark river bird often seen on rocks in fast streams. It bobs up and down and flies low over the water with quick wingbeats.

What are divers in birdwatching?

Divers are large waterbirds built for swimming and catching fish underwater. They sit low in the water, have strong legs set far back, and can look sleek with long necks.

Where do sandpipers usually feed?

Sandpipers usually feed on shorelines, mudflats, and the edges of lakes and rivers. They search for small insects, worms, and crustaceans in wet sand or shallow water.

To see a larger image, click on the picture.
1 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of http://www.naturespicsonline.com/
Curlew
Woodcock
Jack Snipe
Great Northern Diver
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Numenius arquata
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Resident Breeding Species
  • The largest European wading bird.
  • Instantly recognisable on winter estuaries or summer moors by its long, downcurved bill, brown upperparts, long legs and evocative call.
  • Coastal numbers build up from July.
2 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Ken Billington
Red-throated Diver
Black-throated Diver
Common Snipe
Little Stint
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Calidris minuta
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Winter Visitor & Passage Migrant
  • This bird nests on a scrape in bare ground, laying 3-5 eggs.
  • It is polygamous, and male and female may incubate separate clutches.
  • The call is a sharp 'stit'.
3 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Carley, Curtis
Great Northern Diver
Black-throated Diver
Dunlin
Jack Snipe
  • Group: Divers
  • Binomial: Gavia arctica
  • Order: Galliformes
  • Family: Gaviidae
  • Status: Resident Breeder And Winter Visitor
  • These streamlined diving birds sit low in the water and dive with consummate ease.
  • Calls include a yodelling high-pitched wail and harsh growls.
4 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of David Karna
Curlew
European Dipper
Red-throated Diver
Great Northern Diver
  • Group: Divers
  • Binomial: Gavia stellata
  • Order: Galliformes
  • Family: Gaviidae
  • Status: Resident Breeder And Winter Visitor
  • They usually jump up to dive and can stay underwater for a minute and a half.
  • It is the only species of its kind able to take off directly from land.
5 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of J M Garg
Dunlin
Woodcock
Common Snipe
Curlew
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Gallinago gallinago
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Resident Breeding Species And Summer Visitor
  • The male performs 'winnowing' displays during courtship, flying high in circles and then taking shallow dives to produce a 'drumming' sound by vibrating its tail feathers.
6 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Oldbilluk
Black-throated Diver
Jack Snipe
Red-throated Diver
Dunlin
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Lymnocryptes minimus
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Winter Visitor & Passage Migrant
  • A secretive bird and when approached it tends to crouch down, relying on its camouflaged plumage.
  • When feeding it has a characteristic 'bouncing' motion, as if on a spring.
7 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Mark Medcalf
Black-throated Diver
Little Stint
European Dipper
Dunlin
  • Group: Dippers
  • Binomial: Cinclus cinclus
  • Order: Passeriformes
  • Family: Cinclidae
  • Status: Resident Breeding Species
  • Flies rapidly and straight, its short wings whirring swiftly and without pauses or glides.
  • When displaying, the male will take long and high flights accompanied by sharp metallic calls.
8 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Mdf
Jack Snipe
Red-throated Diver
Dunlin
European Dipper
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Calidris alpina
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Winter Visitor And Passage Migrant
  • Highly gregarious in winter, sometimes forming large flocks on coastal mudflats or sandy beaches.
  • Large numbers can often be seen swirling in synchronized flight.
9 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Loon
Great Northern Diver
European Dipper
Dunlin
Curlew
  • Group: Divers
  • Binomial: Gavia immer
  • Order: Galliformes
  • Family: Gaviidae
  • Status: Winter Visitor
  • This species is a specialist fish-eater, diving as deep as 60 m.
  • It flies with its neck outstretched, usually calling a particular tremolo.
  • Its call has been called 'haunting' and 'enchanting'.
10 .
What is the name of this bird?
Photograph courtesy of Ronald Sl at Wikipedia
Black-throated Diver
European Dipper
Eurasian Woodcock
Common Snipe
  • Group: Sandpipers and allies
  • Binomial: Scolopax rusticola
  • Order: Charadriiformes
  • Family: Scolopacidae
  • Status: Resident Breeding Species
  • A large bulky wading bird.
  • Largely nocturnal, spending most of the day in dense cover.
  • Their eyes are located on the sides of their heads, which gives them 360 degree vision.
Author:  Sarah Garratty

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