Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica is one of those species that you might only pick up if you live near the coast, on an island, or underneath a narrow migration corridor. They migrate in flocks; lone individuals are rare. Coastal lighthouses are ideal places to intercept them, and seven of the recordings here were made either right below a lighthouse, on Texel in Noord-Holland, the Netherlands, or close to one at Portland in Dorset, England.
Frequently misidentified, this is one of the more challenging waders to learn, and it has been rewarding to study. Depending where you live, learning opportunities may be limited, and it has a large repertoire of calls, some of which can easily be confused with other species. Fortunately its calls by night or day are the same, so take every opportunity to listen for and learn the calls described below, if you find yourself in their company during the day.
The dominant NFC is the kek call, so it helps to learn that one first. It will nearly always be mixed in with the other call-types when flocks migrate at night and is the only call likely to be used by a lone migrant. With enough practice it will become possible to identify Bar-tailed Godwit using any of these call-types, given good listening conditions.
Effects of recording quality
Effects of recording quality
Effects of recording quality
While there are enough recordings of Bar-tailed Godwit migrating at night to describe its NFCs with confidence, the same cannot currently be said of Black-tailed Godwit. To ensure accuracy, the comparisons above have been primarily based on calls of the latter species during the day, assuming that like other waders they use the same calls at night. In particular, it is not clear whether flocks of Black-tailed use much ‘husky chatter’ during nocturnal migration. We expect so, in which case it will likely be very similar to that of Bar-tailed, but with more downward-inflected kep calls in the mix, rather than nearly symmetrical kek calls.