An American Woodcock (Scolopax minor) works the mudflat, bill caked with mire. On July 12, Shauna and I made an early morning visit to a nearby hotspot, Glacier Ridge Metro Park in Union County, Ohio. We had visited this site a few days prior with the aim of shooting dragonflies in flight. That foray met with some success, but the bird life was so interesting that we focused on avifauna on the 7/12/2025 foray.
Especially notable were up to five American Woodcocks feeding out on the mudflat, sometimes venturing quite close. While I made the image above with my Canon 800mm f/5.6 (as with the others), I barely had to crop this photo and at times the bird wandered inside the 14-foot minimum focus distance of the lens. Needless to say, it was a wonderful opportunity to observe woodcocks busily feeding, and that's what we concentrated on.
A woodcock tugs a long, elastic worm from the muck. Sorry, I do not know the species or even group that the "worm" belongs to, but whatever they are there are plenty of them. We saw and photographed many such captures.Apparently, no one is quite sure how woodcocks divine the location of subterranean worms. Visually? By sound or vibration? Rooting about in the mire with their sensitive bill tips? Probably a combination of these, and who knows whatever else, I would say.
Sometimes it would appear that a bird would spot something, move quickly towards it, plunge its bill into the soil, root around, and extract a worm. Other times the woodcock would clearly be engaged in exploratory probing, plunging its bill deep into the ground, searching with rapid sewing machine-like motions. Then, apparently when prey was detected, it would freeze for a bit, and we knew it was likely that a worm would soon be pulled above ground.
Woodcocks can move the upper bill mandible independently, allowing the bird to open the tip and grasp objects under the ground and sight unseen. The terminal end of the upper mandible is also beset with sensitive nerve endings, aiding the bird in tactile sensory recognition.
Virtually all of the literature that I have seen describes the American Woodcock as completely solitary, at nearly all times of year. The pair only forms a brief union to mate, then the male goes his own way. Apparently the same is true for feeding behavior, and the other woodcocks that were present did maintain good distances from one another,
One might wonder if one of the birds is a juvenile, and the other the mother. But that would seem highly unlikely. Woodcock chicks can forage for food within 3-4 days of hatching, and maternal care ends after a week or so, apparently. By this point in their development, the parental bond should be long broken.
I wonder if it might be some sort of communal feeding strategy in that the participation of both birds ups the odds of finding food. The two birds rarely got any further apart than the distance in that photo, and often both of them had their bills buried in the same immediate vicinity. As near as I could tell, only one bird would eat the worm - they never appeared to pull it apart so that each got a piece. And both birds captured food, not just one.
Anyway, it's normally about impossible to watch feeding woodcocks in typical brushy/grassy/otherwise thickly vegetated habitat, so there may be feeding strategies that we don't know about.
Or perhaps I'm just missing something obvious. If you can shed light on this behavior, please leave a comment.