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Range
Breeds
on the coastal plain of western and southern Alaska. Winters only
on the Pacific coast, from southeast Alaska to central Mexico.
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Status
Fairly common to locally abundant migrant
and winter visitant on the coast. Fairly common in summer. Casual
in the interior.
The Black Turnstone is widely distributed
along the inner and outer coast. Its distribution is largely restricted
to rocky coastal shorelines, but it frequents many fiords and protected
inlets. It is a vagrant in the interior. The Black Turnstone usually
occurs in flocks of 10 to 50 birds, but flocks of up to 4,000 have
been recorded during peak migratory movements.
The Black Turnstone is the most abundant
shorebird of rocky shorelines. Favourite habitats include reefs,
rocky beaches, jetties, and gravel bars at the mouths of rivers
or along lagoons. It may also forage on adjacent mudflats, wet sandy
beaches, floating kelp beds, and piles of washed-up seaweed. Black
Turnstones have been recorded roosting on dry rocks, jetties, and
floating log booms at which time they may gather into extremely
dense flocks.
Overwintering birds occur in substantial
numbers along the outer coast, which makes the beginning of the
northward spring movement difficult to discern. Hatter et al. (1978)
found no obvious spring movement through Pacific Rim National Park.
A peak migration seems to occur along the coast in late April and
early May. J.A. Munro (1936a) documents increasing numbers from
29 April to 4 May at Tlell followed by a rapid decrease through
to 10 May. Dawe (1976, 1980) notes that a large influx occurs at
the Little Qualicum River estuary from late April to early May and
then ends abruptly. The spring movement ends by mid-May. Late migrants
and some nonbreeding yearlings occur from late May through June.
The postbreeding southward movement begins in late June and accelerates
through the summer. Numbers remain moderate until September when
the late-departing juveniles arrive. The Baynes Sound area supports
the largest wintering numbers in the province. There, numbers increase
through November, peak in late December and early January, and taper
off thereafter. Winter flocks rarely exceed 200 birds and frequently
contain Surfbirds, Rock Sandpipers, as well as Sanderlings. |
Status
Change
No change. |
Nonbreeding
Not available. |
Breeding
Not available. |
| Nests: 
Not available.
Eggs:
Not available.
Nest
Success:
Not available. |
Remarks
The Black Turnstone is faithful to specific
wintering localities year after year (Gill et al. 1983). Thus, flocks
observed in winter on the British Columbia coast are probably found
there throughout that season. W.G. Smith (1952) discusses the winter
foods and feeding behaviour of the Black Turnstone at Iona Island
near Vancouver. |
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