Spoon bill sandpiper huddles in grass
Spoon-bill sandpiper chick
Photo: John O’Sullivan/RSPB

One of the Far North’s most interesting (and odd-looking) shorebirds may be sliding ever closer toward extinction due to habitat loss in the Asian Far East.

The spoon-billed sandpiper — which breeds in summer along the Russian coast of the Bering and Chukchi seas west of Alaska — has been losing population for years. This summer uncovered more bad news.

“With only 200-300 pairs left, conservationists are calling for urgent help to tackle the decline,” reported an on-line story posted by Birdlife International.

“We’ve seen a 70 percent drop in the number of breeding pairs at some sites over the last couple of years,” says Evgeny Syroechkovskiy, Vice President of the Russian Bird Conservation Union (BirdLife in Russia). “If this decline continues, these amazing birds won’t be around for much longer”


The plight of the spoon-billed sandpiper illustrates how bird populations must have cooperation by countries throughout their migratory ranges in order to survive the juggernaut of human activity. More and more, shorebird scientists and conservationists have to conduct field work, take action, do satellite tracking and outreach in locales thousands of miles apart.

An estimated 1,000 to 2,499 spoonbills remain, according to Birdlife International. The birds face hunting, disturbance and human development along their migratory routes and in their very few winter sites in South and Southeast Asia.

The online story by Birdlife International offers more details and links to take action:

Populations of one of the world’s strangest birds have crashed over the last decade, and surveys this summer of its breeding grounds in the remote Russian province of Chukotka suggest that the situation is now critical.

The charismatic, and rather aptly named, Spoon-billed Sandpiper — Eurynorhynchus pygmeus — is now worryingly close to becoming extinct.

The reasons for these losses are complex, involving changes to habitat during migration and loss of breeding areas. What is clear is that nest predation by foxes and disturbance by people and dogs could prove to be the final nail in the coffin for the few birds left.

“Action to safeguard the remaining breeding pairs needs to be taken now for there to be any chance of saving them,” says Evgeny Syroechkovskiy. “We are planning to put wardens in place at these critical sites. Once they are protected and the birds are successfully fledging young, we can get on with the task of trying to save areas that they use whilst on migration”

Spoon-billed Sandpipers’ spoon-shaped bill is still something of a mystery, the exact use for which is still unknown. They breed during June-July in a small strip of coastal Arctic tundra in Chukotka, NE Russia.

They then migrate thousands of kilometres to winter along coasts in South and South-East Asia. Spoon-billed Sandpipers are one of several species to depend on the rich tidal coasts of the Yellow Sea in east Asia, where they stop to refuel on their way to and from their breeding grounds.

Dead spoon-billed sandpiper on a beach in South Korea
Dead Spoon-billed Sandpiper in South Korea in September 2006
Source: Nial Moores/Birds Korea

“Coastal reclamation in South Korea is currently destroying over 40,000 ha of habitat; coastal habitats are being converted into saltpans and shrimp farms in Bangladesh and Chinese coasts have been rapidly developed in recent years,” says Christoph Zoeckler, international coordinator of the Spoon-billed Sandpiper Action Plan (PDF), “They are just running out of places to stop and feed on migration.”

What seems certain is that if these changes continue there will soon be no place left for Spoon-billed Sandpipers.

“The recent declines have shocked those concerned about the species, but with investment and the dedication of those involved we can still save the Spoon-billed Sandpiper.” says Richard Grimmett, BirdLife’s Global Conservation Manager.

BirdLife International has launched the Preventing Extinctions initiative to try and turn the tide for Spoon-billed Sandpiper and species like it, and is looking for companies, institutions and individuals to step up and provide funding by becoming BirdLife Species Champions.

With the right conservation action plan in place it is possible to save a species. It has been done before, but it takes hard work and hard cash but aren’t we all the better for knowing that a bird with a spoon for a bill exists out there, somewhere?