Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Articles

Vol. 37 No. 2 (2006)

NOTES: CONFIRMED BREEDING OF THE GREATER YELLOWLEGS IN SOUTHERN SOUTHEAST ALASKA

Submitted
September 21, 2025
Published
April 1, 2006

Abstract

The known breeding range of the Greater Yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca) extends from Newfoundland, Labrador, and Nova Scotia west to east-central British Columbia and southern Alaska (AOU 1998). In Alaska, this species nests from Etolin and Kupreanof islands in southeast Alaska north and west to Kodiak Island, the Alaska Peninsula, and the western Yukon River valley (Elphick and Tibbitts 1998). The breeding status of this species along the coast of northern British Columbia (Campbell et al. 1990) and southern southeast Alaska has not been determined (Elphick and Tibbitts 1998), primarily due to a lack of observers. In June 1909, Swarth (1911) reported seeing birds which he thought might be nesting on Duke Island, one of the southernmost islands in southeast Alaska, but he provided few details.

References