Winter plumage.
© Gregg Thompson
  • Winter plumage adult
  • Winter plumage adult
  • Winter plumage.
  • Winter plumage.
  • Winter plumage. In front of Surfbird.

Hover over to view. Click to enlarge.

Rock Sandpiper

Calidris ptilocnemis
Charadriiformes
This is a large and highly varied group of birds that do not have many outward similarities. Most are water birds that feed on invertebrates or small aquatic creatures. The order is well represented in Washington, with seven families:
Scolopacidae
This large and diverse family of shorebirds is made up mostly of northern breeders that migrate long distances. Their highly migratory nature leads them astray fairly frequently, and rarities often show up outside their normal range. Many of these mostly coastal birds forage in relation to the tides, rather than the time of day. They use a variety of foraging techniques, but the most common techniques are picking food from the ground or water, or probing into wet sand or mud. Those that probe generally have sensitive bills that open at the tips. Most members of this group eat small invertebrates. Many make dramatic, aerial display-flights during courtship. Nesting practices vary, but both parents typically help raise the young. Clutch size is usually four, and both parents generally incubate. The young are precocial and leave the nest within a day of the hatching of the last chick. Most feed themselves, although the parents generally tend the young for a varying period of time. The female typically abandons the group first, leaving the male to care for the young until they are independent.
Uncommon migrant and winter on coast.
  • Species of Concern

General Description

A heavily speckled, cryptic bird, the Rock Sandpiper is well camouflaged. The adult in breeding plumage is reddish above, with gray wings. Its bill is slightly drooped and of medium length. It has a heavily streaked neck and breast, reddish-brown cap, and dark patch on its cheek. It has a dark patch on its belly that does not extend behind its legs (as in the Dunlin). Its legs are gray in the breeding season, but turn to yellow in the non-breeding season. Non-breeding birds are gray with white-edged feathers, giving them a scalloped look overall. The juvenile appears similar to the adult in breeding plumage, but lacks the reddish-brown cap and dark belly. Since adult birds molt on the breeding grounds before migrating south, juveniles should be easily distinguished from adults when they first arrive in Washington in the fall.

Habitat

During the breeding season, Rock Sandpipers inhabit dry, barren tundra. The rest of the year, they are rarely found away from the habitat from which they earned their name. They usually forage below the tide line of rocky beaches and jetties on the Washington coast.

Behavior

In Washington, Rock Sandpipers are usually found singly or in small groups, in flocks with Black Turnstones and Surfbirds. They are fairly gregarious, but will sometimes gather in groups separate from the other rock shorebirds. Unlike their counterparts on the rocks, Rock Sandpipers do not chip or pry attached prey from its substrate. They move slowly along and pick up moving prey from the crevices and seaweed among the rocks.

Diet

Rock Sandpipers are unusual among shorebirds in that they commonly eat vegetable matter, including seeds, berries, moss, and algae. They also eat invertebrates, including mollusks, crustaceans, and marine worms.

Nesting

The nest of the Rock Sandpiper is located on the ground in the open, dry tundra, often on a raised area of lichen or moss. The male begins a deep scrape, and the female may help by adding lichen, leaves, or grass. Both parents help incubate the four eggs, although the male may provide most of the incubation, which lasts for about 20 days. The chicks leave the nest soon after hatching and feed themselves. The male usually tends the brood, although sometimes both parents or only the female will do so. The young probably begin to fly at about three weeks.

Migration Status

Adults molt on the breeding grounds before migrating south, so southward migration is late in the fall. Some populations that breed on islands off Alaska are resident. The populations that migrate winter along the Pacific coast to northern California.

Conservation Status

The Canadian Wildlife Service estimates the global population at 200,000 birds, with 150,000 breeding in North America. The remainder breed on the northeast Asian coast. The Rock Sandpiper has been declining in this state for unknown reasons since the 1970s. This decline is only in the southern end of their winter range and has not been reflected on their breeding grounds. Rock Sandpipers are listed as an at-risk species on the Partners in Flight watch list, and more study is needed to understand the factors contributing to their decline.

When and Where to Find in Washington

The Rock Sandpiper is an uncommon species found on jetties (such as the jetty at Ocean Shores) and the rocky shores of coastal Washington from October to mid-May. Rarely, a few birds are seen at either end of that time period, as early as August, and as late as the end of May. Rarely, birds are seen in protected waters, south into Puget Sound as far as Seattle. They have not been recorded in eastern Washington.

Abundance Code DefinitionsAbundance

C=Common; F=Fairly Common; U=Uncommon; R=Rare; I=Irregular
EcoregionJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Oceanic
Pacific Northwest CoastUUUUR UUU
Puget TroughRRRR RRR
North Cascades
West Cascades
East Cascades
Okanogan
Canadian Rockies
Blue Mountains
Columbia Plateau

Washington Range Map

North American Range Map

North America map legend

Federal Endangered Species ListAudubon/American Bird Conservancy Watch ListState Endangered Species ListAudubon Washington Vulnerable Birds List
Early Warning

View full list of Washington State's Species of Special Concern