Tringa totanus ( Common Redshank - Κοκκινοσκέλης )

Height : 27–29 cm
Wingspan : 48–55 cm
Weighs : around 120 g.
Longevity17 years
Diet : insects , worms, spiders, .mollusks and crustaceans , sometimes small fish and tadpoles .

Vasos Vasiliou

Marios Philippou - Akrotiri Limassol
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The common redshank or simply redshank (Tringa totanus) is a Eurasian wader in the large family Scolopacidae.

Description

Common redshanks in breeding plumage are a marbled brown color, slightly lighter below. In winter plumage they become somewhat lighter-toned and less patterned, being rather plain greyish-brown above and whitish below. They have red legs and a black-tipped red bill, and show white up the back and on the wings in flight.

The spotted redshank (T. erythropus), which breeds in the Arctic, has a longer bill and legs; it is almost entirely black in breeding plumage and very pale in winter. It is not a particularly close relative of the common redshank, but rather belongs to a high-latitude lineage of largish shanks. T. totanus on the other hand is closely related to the marsh sandpiper (T. stagnatilis), and closer still to the small wood sandpiper (T. glareola). The ancestors of the latter and the common redshank seem to have diverged around the Miocene-Pliocene boundary, about 5–6 million years ago. These three subarctic- to temperate-region species form a group of smallish shanks with have red or yellowish legs, and in breeding plumage are generally a subdued light brown above with some darker mottling, and have somewhat diffuse small brownish spots on the breast and neck.[10]

Behaviour and ecology

They are wary and noisy birds which will alert everything else with their loud piping call.

Breeding

Redshanks will nest in any wetland, from damp meadows to saltmarsh, often at high densities.[13] They lay 3–5 eggs.

Food and feeding

Like most waders, they feed on small invertebrates.