I found this interesting wader in an irrigation pond in Las Martelas (Los Llanos de Aridane) this morning, Sep 11.
The Pectoral Sandpiper (Calidris melanotos) breeds in the Arctic tundra, from Siberia to the Hudson Bay in Canada, and winters in South America, and to a lesser extent in SE Australia, Tasmania and New Zealand (Farmer et al, 2020).
Records in Europe, relatively numerous and on the increase, have traditionally been regarded as vagrants from North America, but it seems possible that a large proportion of the birds could come directly from Siberia, on a south-westerly course towards sub-Saharan Africa (Alström et al, 1991; Lees and Gilroy, 2004), perhaps due to a westward expansion of the species' breeding area (Farmer et al, 2020). Indeed, the species might be breeding occasionally in the far north of Europe (Keller et al, 2020).
In Spain, records became annual from 1980 onwards and by 2015, when the species officially ceased to be classed as a rarity, the total had reached 382, of which 83% stemmed from the mainland plus the Balearic Islands, and 17% from the Canary Islands (Gil-Velasco et al, 2017).
My own observations thus reflect the general tendency throughout Spain, where autumn records outnumber those in spring. and many of the birds are juveniles, as the one shown here.
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