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Grey Phalarope - Phalaropus fulicarius
Like the other Phalarope species, the female is the more colourful. In North America, these birds are known as red phalaropes, due to the birds' orangey-red breeding plumage.
Grey Phalaropes spend a large proportion of their lives out at sea, many miles from land. Birds that turn up in the UK - largely around the coast but occasionally at wetlands inland - have been blown off-course by bad weather and strong winds.
Most often seen between October and January.
In winter, eats marine plankton picked from the sea's surface. On breeding grounds, grey phalaropes eat small insects and aquatic creatures.
This Arctic-breeding wader sometimes comes to the coasts of the UK after storms. They are most often seen at the coast; around 200 birds per year are seen.
Rare visitor to Leicestershire and Rutland.
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Yellow squares = NBN records (all known data)
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Species profile
- Common names
- Red Phalarope, Grey Phalarope
- Species group:
- Birds
- Kingdom:
- Animalia
- Order:
- Charadriiformes
- Family:
- Scolopacidae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 2
- First record:
- 01/11/2003 (Chris Lythall)
- Last record:
- 13/10/2013 (Baker, Rodney)
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