Western Sandpiper

(Calidris mauri) (WESA)

Photographic Identification Guide

Western Sandpiper (Calidris mauri) (WESA) is one of five species of small sandpipers referred to as “peeps” in North America. WESA is the western analog to Semipalmated Sandpiper (SESA) in the east. In all plumages, WESA leg color, back (mantle) color, amount of breast markings, and bill shape are extremely variable. 
In this guide, we cover the features, in order of importance, to look for on these birds. When discussing plumages, we use the terms winter, spring, and summer to refer to northern hemisphere seasons. Because some of these birds spend parts of the year in the northern and southern hemispheres, the correct technical terms for the plumage stages—basic and alternate—help avoid the confusion of seasonal terminology.
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    Fig. 9. Western Sandpiper. Summer (alternate) plumage molting to winter (basic) plumage. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 3 September 2019.
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    Fig. 5. Western Sandpiper. Winter (basic) molting to spring (alternate) plumage. Bolivar Peninsula, TX. 13 April 2017.
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    Fig. 2. Western Sandpiper. Basic (winter) plumage with a few unmolted juvenile scapular feathers. Avalon, NJ. 23 September 2013.
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    Fig. 13. Bill lengths compared: Semipalmated Sandpiper (SESA) male and female vs. Western Sandpiper (WESA) female. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 9 September 2014.
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    Fig. 1. Western Sandpiper. Basic (winter) plumage. Avalon, NJ. 23 September 2013.
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    Fig. 12. Western Sandpiper. Juvenile molting to winter (basic) plumage. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 3 September 2014.
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    Fig. 16. Comparison of Sanderling and Western Sandpipers in winter (basic) or molting plumage. Avalon, NJ. 23 September 2013.
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    Fig. 15. Comparison of Sanderling (SAND) in various plumages and Western Sandpiper (WESA) in spring (alternate) plumage. Plymouth Beach, Plymouth, MA. 8 May 2019.
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    Fig. 14. Comparison of Semipalmated Sandpiper and Western Sandpiper, both in juvenile plumage. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 12 September 2023.
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    Fig. 11. Western Sandpiper juvenile with long bill, rusty upper scapulars, anchor shapes on lower scapulars. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 3 September 2019.
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    Fig. 10. Western Sandpiper. Juvenile with long bill. Nahant Beach, Nahant, MA. 9 September 2014.
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    Fig. 8. Western Sandpiper. Salt-and-pepper mantle: summer (alternate) molting to winter (basic) plumage. Winthrop Beach, Winthrop, MA. 22 August 2014.
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    Fig. 7. Western Sandpiper. Details of spring (alternate) mantle feathers. Plymouth Beach, Plymouth, MA. 5 May 2019.
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    Fig. 6. Western Sandpiper. Spring (alternate) plumage. Bolivar Peninsula, TX. 13 April 2017.
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    Fig. 4. Western Sandpiper. Winter (basic) molting to spring (alternate) plumage. Note hallux (rear toe). Bolivar Peninsula, TX. 9 March 2022.
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    Fig. 3. Western Sandpiper. Basic (winter) plumage. Bolivar Peninsula, TX. 18 October 2017.
The photos in this species account are arranged in this order:
Basic: winter plumage, roughly September to March.
WESA acquires winter (basic) plumage in early fall, usually when it approaches or arrives at its winter range. Basic-plumaged WESA may be found anywhere from New Jersey south; see Fig. 1, Fig. 3.
Alternate: first spring and summer after hatch year; or adult breeding plumage, March to August.
Beginning in spring, winter (basic) feathers on WESA are gradually replaced by alternate feathers; see Fig. 4. Most alternate feathers last until early fall of the same year; replacement by winter (basic) feathers begins in July or August; see Fig. 8, Fig. 9.
Juvenile: young birds, recently hatched, July to September.
See Fig. 10These feathers are acquired on the breeding grounds immediately after the natal down is shed and before the young begin their southbound migration.

Size and weight

Females are slightly larger and considerably longer-billed than males.
Body length:
5.5–6.75 in. (14–17 cm)
Wingspan:
14–15 in. (35–37 cm)
Bill length:
0.8–1.14 in. (21–29 mm)
Weight:
0.77–1.2 oz. (22–35 g)

Calls

WESA calls are generally high pitched, compared to the somewhat guttural calls of SESA.
Calls at Salton Sea, Imperial, CA, 2015:
Calls at Shoal Bay, BC, 2018:

Plumage and other characteristics

The bill, always black, is deep at the base and tapers sharply to a point. Often, a subtle down-curve near the tip is visible, especially in long-billed individuals. Examples of this: Fig. 1, Fig. 3, Fig. 4, Fig. 7, Fig. 14.

Female WESA has a very long bill that is usually unmistakable in the field. See Fig. 13, which juxtaposes male and female Semipalmated Sandpipers (SESA) with a long-billed female WESA.

Winter (basic) plumage of WESA is paler and grayer than the same plumage on Semipalmated Sandpiper (SESA) or Least Sandpiper (LESA).

Many Westerns winter farther north than the other two small Calidris species and undergo the molt to winter plumage earlier in the fall, often in September; see Fig. 1 and Fig. 16, which show a number of WESA in New Jersey completely molted to winter plumage by September 23. Winter (basic) feather pattern is pale gray bisected by a sharp dark shaft and edged with a very narrow pale margin.

The bird in Fig. 2, is a young bird in winter (basic) plumage with a few juvenile rusty scapular feathers remaining.

Beginning in early spring, winter (basic) plumage is slowly replaced by alternate plumage; see Fig. 4.

Spring (alternate) feathers have wide dark centers and wide pale margins. The bases of many of the feathers have a strong rufous tone. Most of the rufous is concentrated in scapular feathers. The crown and the area behind the eye also become suffused with rufous. Males in alternate plumage are often more colorful than females; see Fig. 5, Fig. 6, Fig. 7.

Alternate-plumaged birds have breasts that are strongly streaked with arrow-shaped marks and streaks along the flanks; see Fig. 6.

Alternate plumage on birds reaching their first year of life (fledged the previous summer) is usually less colorful than alternate (breeding) plumage on birds two years old or older.

Spring (alternate) and summer (alternate) are the same plumage; however, as seasons advance, feather margins become worn, colors fade and the plumage looks different. Compare the broad pale margins of spring (alternate) feathers (Fig. 7, photo taken in May) with the worn, narrow fringes of summer (alternate) feathers (Fig. 8, photo taken in August).

Beginning in July, summer (alternate) plumaged WESA begins the molt to winter (basic) plumage and the birds display a salt-and-pepper appearance as the worn, dark older feathers are replaced with new paler feathers with thin, dark central shafts ; see Fig. 8, Fig. 9.

Newly fledged young birds arrive in New England from the Arctic in late summer, displaying the characteristic fresh, evenly patterned, scaly look of all young shorebirds. The upper scapular feathers on these birds nearly always have dark centers and rufous margins; see Fig. 10, Fig. 11, Fig. 14.

Fig. 12 illustrates a juvenile bird partially molted to winter (basic) plumage in early September.

Leg color ranges from dark gray to dark green to black.

When these birds walk in the sand and wrack, it may be possible to see the partial palmations (webbing) between the toes; see, Fig. 1, Fig. 6, Fig. 10, Fig. 11.

Breeding range, migration, wintering range, habitat

WESA breeds in far northwestern Alaska and easternmost Siberia. The breeding habitat of WESA is coastal uplands, occasionally lower mountain slopes with scattered low or dwarf trees, always in close proximity to wetlands where they feed. During migrations, coastal Western Sandpipers feed on the ocean shore, running back and forth at the water line. Due to their slightly longer legs and bill, they often feed in deeper water than Semipalmated Sandpipers.

At inland sites, the birds feed on the margins of shallow lakes or ponds.

In winter, coastal areas with fine sand or mud are preferred feeding sites. WESA food consists of small insects, marine worms and small bivalves. They also feed on surface biofilm, a “soup” of diatoms and microbes churned up in coastal waters. At higher tides, WESA roosts with Sanderling (SAND) and other sandpipers in dense flocks on higher dunes, sometimes on rock jetties or breakwaters; see Fig. 16.

In spring, a few WESA individuals arrive in Massachusetts in early to mid-May; see Fig. 7. Fall birds are far more numerous than spring birds on the New England coast. Molting fall birds in summer (alternate) or juvenile plumage may be found from late August to October.

WESA winters primarily on the west coasts of North America, Central America and northern South America from British Columbia to Peru.

A portion of the WESA population winters on the eastern coast of the United States from New Jersey south to Florida, along the coast of Texas, down the eastern coast of Central America and on the northern coast of Venezuela.

Similar species

WESA compared to SESA

Western and Semipalmated Sandpipers (WESA, SESA) are close in size and shape. In the spring, the rare WESA individual in New England, with its distinctive alternate plumage, is rather easy to pick out among the hordes of SESA migrants. In the fall, far more WESA individuals arrive on the New England coast before heading south. Due to variations and overlap in bill length and variations in feather wear and molt, it is not always possible to separate WESA from SESA in the field, especially juveniles. It is safest to count as WESA only individuals with long bills and some rufous in the upper scapulars. The situation is more complicated from New Jersey south because many more WESA mix with the migrant flocks of SESA during fall migration at more southerly latitudes along the east coast of North America.

Note the following:

  • The rufous color in spring and summer (alternate) WESA upperparts is concentrated in the crown, cheeks and scapulars, contrasting with the gray of the rest of the upperparts. SESA in alternate plumage may show some rusty on the crown and behind the eye but not the bright rufous patches typical of WESA.
  • In alternate plumage, SESA has a streaky breast band and some streaks and flecks extend to the flanks. WESA in that plumage often has arrow-shaped marks on the breast and flanks; see Fig. 7.
  • Many WESA winter in southeastern US, so their molt to winter (basic) plumage occurs early, often by September.
  • Female WESA have very long bills and are usually unmistakable in the field; see Fig. 13, which juxtaposes some Semipalmated Sandpipers (SESA) (male and female) with a long-billed (female) WESA.
  • The longest-billed (female) WESA and shortest-billed (male) SESA are easy to pick out in a flock. Others, not so easy.
  • Female SESA may have bills that are longer than male WESA. This is especially the case with the eastern long-billed SESA population; see discussion of long-billed birds in the SESA species write-up.
  • Small differences in perceived bill length (as opposed to measured in-hand length) are difficult to judge. Therefore, except in the case of extremely long-billed birds (female WESA) or short-billed birds (male SESA), is it not safe to use bill-length as the sole criterion for determining species. Other features are helpful; in juvenile birds, even a few rufous feathers on the upper scapulars combined with the long bill are the safest method for distinguishing WESA; see the section on plumage.
  • WESA and SESA both have partial palmations (webbing) between the toes.
  • In late summer and fall, Western Sandpipers (WESA) molt their flight feathers during migration; Semipalmated Sandpipers (SESA) almost never do until they reach their wintering areas. In a flying flock in that season, birds with missing or half-grown flight feathers are most likely WESA.
  • On the bird in Fig. 11, note that the lower scapulars have anchor-shaped center spots. This is somewhat useful in distinguishing juvenile WESA, but many SESA juveniles have similar markings on the lower scapulars. These marks are useful in separating American dark-legged small Calidris sandpipers from Eurasian ones.

WESA compared to WRSA

White-rumped Sandpiper (WRSA) migrates primarily throughout the eastern half of North America; Western Sandpiper (WESA) breeds in northwestern Alaska. WESA individuals migrate to our coast with regularity in the fall and, therefore, may be found in mixed flocks with WRSA. WRSA is noticeably larger than WESA and looks longer due to its long wings.
Note the following:
  • The streaked and uniformly gray head, nape, shoulders, neck, and upper breast on WRSA create the impression of a cowl and an overall grayer bird than WESA. WESA in winter (basic) or juvenile plumage usually has a clear neck and center of breast.
  • In a few cases when it is possible to see the feet, the lack of webbing between toes is a clear indication that the bird is not a Western Sandpiper.

WESA compared to SAND

Sanderling (SAND) and Western Sandpiper (WESA) are quite different in size; SAND is approximately 20% larger.

  • The rufous in alternate-plumaged WESA is primarily on the crown, cheeks and scapulars. On alternate-plumaged SAND, cinnamon-rufous and black feathers are speckled evenly on the mantle, neck, face, head and breast; see Fig. 15.
  • The juvenile plumage of SAND and WESA is highly patterned. WESA displays a scaly brown-and-white pattern; SAND is boldly checkered black-and-white.
  • SAND winter (basic) mantle plumage is the palest of grays, compared to the brownish gray of WESA; see Fig. 16.

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