
- Knots, oystercatcher, Jeroen Reneerkens (jeroenreneerkens@hetnet.nl
The birds of the tidal areas
Throughout the world, many birds are found in the transition areas between land and sea. That is not so unusual, since coastal areas are often rich in food. The Wadden Sea is a good example. Ten million birds have been estimated in this area every year. Some of the bird species remain throughout the year, others come only to breed or to stay for the winter. Others stop over during migration.
- Protection of (tidal flat) birds
- Shorebirds
- Geese
- Ducks
- Gulls
- Terns
- Life in the coastal region
- Eating during low tide
- Competition
- People and shorebirds
- Shellfish fisheries
- Disturbances
- Consequences of severe winters
- Dead birds found after a severe winter:
- Shorebirds: changes since 1975
See also
- Aquatic sports
- Arctic tern
- Bar-tailed godwit
- Benthic fauna tidal flats
- Bird migration
- Bivalves
- Black-headed gull
- Brent goose
- Coastal areas
- Common scoter
- Common tern
- Crabs and lobsters
- Curlew
- Cut trough shell
- Delta
- Ducks
- Dunlin
- Dutch wadden region
- Eider
- Fauna of the sea floor
- Fish Wadden Sea
- Goldeneye
- Greater Scaup
- Grebes
- Grey plover
- Herring gull
- Hiking the flats
- Land reclamation
- Military activities
- Mineral exploitation
- Mussel farming
- Mussels
- Oystercatcher
- Plovers
- Ramsar convention
- Razor shells
- Recreation at sea
- Red knot
- Red-breasted merganser
- Redshank
- Sanderling
- Sandpipers
- Sandwich terns
- Seaweeds
- Shelduck
- Starfish
- Terns
- Tidal flats and shallows
- Tidal-flat fisheries
- Turnstone
- Wadden Sea
- Wadden Sea birds
- Wigeon
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