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Marbled Godwit

Marbled Godwit
Limosa fedoa

Marbled Godwits breed in the center of the continent in the northern prairie wet grasslands and are rare finds in Connecticut.

How to find it: At the Milford Point Coastal Center and elsewhere, scan the marshes at higher tides and look for a large shorebird sometimes with a group of other roosting shorebirds. The observation tower at the center building is a good place to start. If the godwit is visible, there are likely to be other birders viewing it.

What it looks like: One of our largest shorebirds, the Marbled Godwit is about 16 inches long and has a very long, slightly upturned bill with dark tip and pinkish base. This godwit has long legs and is a rich, buff-brown all over with cinnamon wing linings and a plain breast in its non-breeding plumage.

Conservation status: The IUCN lists the Marbled Godwit as a species of Least Concern.

Photo by Alan D. Wilson, Carolinabirds.org.

Saltmarsh Sparrow