The mile-long pilgrimage out to the
tip of Napatree Point in Westerly, the southwestern-most point in the Ocean
State, is a common hike for birdwatchers in spring and late summer, as it’s one
of the best locations to find migrating shorebirds. But during the last few
days of June, hundreds more birders than usual made the trek after an extremely
rare bird – a mega-rarity in birdwatching lingo – was discovered there.
A Terek sandpiper, distinctive for
its long, upturned beak and yellow-orange legs, was observed on Sunday morning,
June 28, by Jan St. Jean, a Charlestown resident and avid birder.
It was the
first time the species had been seen in Rhode Island and is considered by some
to be the rarest bird to show up in the Ocean State in decades.
Terek sandpiper at Napatree Point. (Carlos Pedro) |
“I first saw it behind a mound of
seaweed, and it bobbed up and down like a spotted sandpiper,” she said,
referring to a commonly-seen species at Napatree. “But then I saw that bill and
thought, ‘Oh my god, this is something really good.’ But I didn’t have my scope
to get a better look.”
She texted several birding friends,
one of whom – Carlos Pedro – was birding in nearby Charlestown and happened to
have a field guide to European birds with him.
“I described it to him, and right
away he said ‘Terek,’” St. Jean said. “Everything added up that that’s what it
was.”
Terek sandpipers breed in Finland
and across much of northern Russia and winter on the coast of East Africa,
Australia and South Asia. It is named for the Terek River, which flows into the
Caspian Sea, where it was first observed.
According to Rachel Farrell, a
member of the Rhode Island Avian Records Committee, the Terek sandpiper has
been reported on the East Coast just three other times, including a
Massachusetts appearance in 1990. It is a rare but regular visitor to the western
Aleutian Islands of Alaska and has been observed on coastal California several
times.
A crowd of birders gathers to see the Terek sandpiper (Carlos Pedro) |
“I would think this is the rarest
bird seen here in at least 20 years,” said Farrell, “and maybe since a spotted
redshank was reported in the 1940s or 50s. A wood sandpiper seen in Jamestown [in
2012] is probably a close second.”
How the bird got here is anyone’s
guess.
“No one will ever know,” Farrell
said. “It could have flown straight across the Atlantic. That’s probably the
most likely scenario. I can’t see it coming from the Pacific and flying across
the country. Maybe it came from its breeding grounds over to Greenland and then
to the Canadian Maritimes and down to here.”
St. Jean said that when she finally
realized how rare the bird was in North America, she started shaking.
“My first concern was that I wanted someone else
to see it,” she said. “I didn’t want to be the only one to see it and then have
it fly away and not have any documentation.”
By Sunday afternoon, the Rhode
Island birding community had been alerted to the bird and dozens of people
converged on Napatree Point. Many missed seeing it when the bird flew off in
the direction of Sandy Point Island, a 35-acre island in Little Narragansett
Bay that was formerly part of Napatree Point.
The bird was relocated early Monday
morning, much to the delight of Rhode Island birders, and by Tuesday morning, more
than 100 birders from as far away as New Jersey and Ohio were making the long
walk out to Napatree Point to see it. At times, the bird wasn’t particularly
cooperative, flying to Sandy Point again or remaining hidden in the abundant
mounds of seaweed on the western edge of Napatree.
The discovery of the Terek sandpiper
was the third time St. Jean had found a bird never before recorded in Rhode
Island. She located the state’s first white-faced ibis, a common bird on the
Gulf Coast of Texas and elsewhere in the West, at Marsh Meadows in Jamestown in
1998. She also discovered the state’s first record of a Ross’s goose in 2001 at
Trustom Pond National Wildlife Refuge in South Kingstown.
“I’m out there looking for birds
every day, if I can,” she said. “I know what to look for and when, and I enjoy
it, so why not. It’s fun.”
The only downside to her discovery
of the Terek sandpiper? After waiting to point out the bird to Pedro and other
arriving birders, St. Jean was issued a $75 parking ticket for overstaying her welcome.
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