Many long-legged, long-billed birds
are adapted to live at the junction of land and water.
Large wading birds, including herons, storks, ibises,
spoonbills, and flamingoes, are found throughout the
world, except near the poles. These birds wade in shallow
water or across mudflats, wet fields, or similar environments
to find food. Depending on the species, large wading
birds may eat fish, frogs, shrimp, or microscopic marine
life. Many of the large wading birds gather in enormous
groups to feed, sleep, or nest. Shorebirds often inhabit
puddles or other shallow bodies of water. The diversity
of shorebirds is reflected in their varied bill shapes
and leg lengths. The smallest North American shorebirds,
called stints or peeps, have short, thin bills that
enable them to pick at surface prey, whereas curlews
probe with their long bills for burrowing shellfish
and marine worms that are beyond the reach of most other
shore feeders. Avocets and stilts have long legs and
long bills, both of which help them to feed in deeper
water.
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