The Almost Impossible Mission of Studying the Lesser Yellowlegs

From epic flights to the art of evading traps, join Santiago and Juan David on their exciting mission to understand the migratory routes of these birds.

The most distinctive feature of the Lesser Yellowlegs (Tringa flavipes) is its bright yellow legs, which give it its common name. However, its most impressive characteristic is the ability to fly more than 4,000 kilometers in four days. Yes, that鈥檚 roughly a thousand kilometers a day, usually flying in flocks.

Now, let鈥檚 talk about another trait: being almost a master at evading mist nets. This has been confirmed, with much frustration, by Santiago Mu帽oz and Juan David Garc铆a, two young biologists who have spent several migratory seasons setting up traps in rice fields across Valle del Cauca and Cauca鈥攄epartments located in southwestern Colombia鈥攖o capture these birds. When they succeed, in a race against time, they must quickly remove the birds from the nets, weigh and measure them, check their overall condition, and attach a small (almost tiny, weighing 1.25 g鈥攏o more than 2% of the bird's weight) radio transmitter, before releasing them to continue their journey across the hemisphere. Considering all that鈥檚 involved, half an hour flies by.

But then comes the joy of a job well done. Santiago and Juan have spent entire days, sometimes before dawn, waiting for a bird to fall into the net. Many times (more than they would like to admit), they only catch dragonflies. So, after the adrenaline rush of attaching the radio transmitter to the bird鈥檚 back, they return home with the satisfaction of a mission accomplished.

And the joy of that day only grows when, thanks to the radio transmitter and the Motus Wildlife Tracking System, they can see that Cholao 鈥攖he last tagged Tringa, named after a traditional dessert from the region where it was captured鈥攚eighing 113 grams (with an average weight between 65 and 115 grams), measuring 24 to 30 cm in length, and with a wingspan of 50 to 60 cm, has flown all the way to Texas, where it was detected by the tower located at Rockport Bay Education Center.

The path traced by Cholao鈥檚 transmitter appears as a straight line between Colombia and the United States, passing through Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and part of Mexico. If Cholao had been detected during that four-day period, or afterward, by another MOTUS tower鈥攚hich has a detection range of 50 kilometers鈥攊t would have been possible to learn more about its journey: whether it made stops, its flight altitude, and other details. But it wasn鈥檛. With no further detections, one might even believe it didn鈥檛 survive the journey.

Tringa flavipes is considered a vulnerable species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, having lost 60鈥80% of its population in the last 50 years, according to the North American Bird Conservation Initiative. It's listed as a species of conservation concern in the United States by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and is classified as threatened in Canada by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.

It belongs to the family Scolopacidae, which includes other shorebirds. It is found primarily in North and Central America during the breeding season and migrates to South America for the winter. Individuals that breed in Alaska and Canada migrate to wintering areas in South American countries, reaching as far as Patagonia.

The Lesser Yellowlegs feeds mainly on insects, crustaceans, mollusks, and small fish, using its long, slender bill to probe in mud and sand. It prefers wet habitats such as swamps, marshes, beaches, and coastal areas during migration and breeding, which is why Santiago and Juan David hope to find them in rice fields鈥攁rtificial wetlands that, depending on their growth stage, provide shelter and food for different bird species. However, these ecosystems can be affected by human development and pollution. The presence of birds like Cholao serves as an indicator of the health of aquatic ecosystems, underscoring the importance of conserving wetlands and coastal areas.

Why is this work in Valle del Cauca, Colombia, important? Over 80% of the wetlands that this species used have disappeared in the past 50 years in Valle del Cauca. Rice cultivation provides temporary habitat for the survival of the Lesser Yellowlegs in the region. 约炮视频 is working with the sugarcane sector to promote crop rotation between sugarcane and rice, thereby providing habitat for this and other shorebird and waterbird species.

鈥淚n the first seasons, we worked from 5:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. We also tried 2:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., trying to figure out the best time to capture individuals, thinking they might not see the nets at night,鈥 says Santiago, whose favorite bird is Semnornis ramphastinus, the Toucan Barbet鈥攁 bird iconic to northeastern Ecuador and western Colombia, which he first saw in a bird guide.

Now, also honing the art of waiting, the two biologists have reduced their working hours from 5:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Their best day came in 2022, during the first season they spent two months trying to capture Tringas, in a joint effort with the Colombian NGO SELVA. In the first few days, they caught two individuals. Then, on the last day of the season, they caught a group of 11 individuals, eight of which were tagged with radio transmitters. Quite a feat!

That year, several individuals, including Cholao, made incredible flights to the U.S., according to data from MOTUS receiver stations. However, after reaching the U.S., the signals disappeared. These birds breed in the remote corners of the Boreal Forest in Canada and Alaska, a region rich in peatlands鈥攁 preferred nesting habitat for the Lesser Yellowlegs. What鈥檚 not abundant, however, are MOTUS towers.

The worst season for Santiago and Juan David came in 2023, when they failed to capture even one individual over four months of work, five days a week. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know what happened in the rice fields. We saw many large flocks passing through and were trying to refine our capture methodology. Although we did many tests, we achieved nothing, which was very frustrating,鈥 explains Juan David, whose favorite bird is the Entomodestes coracinus, the Black Solitaire, because it was the first bird he ever captured using a mist net.

鈥淲hen we don鈥檛 catch anything, we ask ourselves if we鈥檙e doing things right. So, we reached out to colleagues who do the same work, and they confirmed that the Lesser Yellowlegs is a very hard bird to catch. They鈥檙e elusive, have perfect vision, are very intelligent, and at the same time very calm. Others have tried different types of traps, always ensuring the bird鈥檚 well-being, and the results are similar,鈥 says Santiago, explaining how difficult their mission is.

The challenge, in addition to the waiting, is placing the nets in areas with many individuals, as that increases the chances of capturing more birds. Fine-tuning their eye to find artificial wetlands, like rice fields, at their prime stage is truly a skill.

鈥淥ur work is the first step in describing the migratory routes of individuals of this species that pass through the geographic valley of the Cauca River, which has historically been a key migration corridor, with high wetland density and crucial stopover sites for shorebirds like the Lesser Yellowlegs,鈥 adds Santiago.

Despite the effort鈥攁nd the frustration of days without results鈥擲antiago and Juan David say they love their work. It鈥檚 peaceful and requires a lot of birdwatching, which they鈥檙e truly passionate about. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much we鈥檇 like to learn, which is why we hope to tag more individuals and also achieve satellite tracking to gather much more detailed information about their routes and contribute valuable data to the conservation of migratory shorebirds that use these ecosystems. By knowing the sites, they visit to rest and feed, we can focus our conservation efforts on those places.鈥

Early Results and Learnings

Jorge Vel谩squez, 约炮视频's science director for Latin America and the Caribbean, explains that "although few transmitters have been deployed on Tringa, evidence shows that the tagged individuals remain in Valle del Cauca throughout their non-breeding period. This suggests that the population arriving in Valle del Cauca spends the boreal winter in the valley, rather than just stopping over on the way to other regions. Therefore, habitat management efforts in rice fields and wetlands in the valley will significantly impact the population that winters there. It has also been documented that the Valle del Cauca population uses the mid-continental route during its northward migration, while it uses both the Atlantic and mid-continental routes during its journey south. This has allowed 约炮视频鈥檚 conservation work in Valle del Cauca to connect with broader conservation efforts in North America, such as those at 约炮视频鈥檚 Riverlands Center and Corkscrew Swamp."