The Eurasian curlew is generally wary. It is highly gregarious outside the breeding season. The oldest recorded is a female 33 years and 8–9 months old,
ringed on
Brownsea Island in 1992 and breeding in the
New Forest, seen still alive at the start of March 2026.
Breeding The
nest is a bare scrape in a meadow or similar habitat. Curlews lay four eggs in April or May, and both adults incubate them for four weeks until they begin to hatch. Curlews tend to nest close to
common kestrel nests as these can offer protection from other predators, such as
corvids, even though kestrels also prey on curlew nests. Eggs Numenius arquata.jpg|
Clutch of eggs Numenius arquata MWNH 0226.JPG|Eggs
Museum Wiesbaden, Germany Curlew (Numenius arquata) in flight.jpg|In flight,
Argyll,
Scotland Eurasian Curlew (Numenius arquata) skull at the Royal Veterinary College anatomy museum.JPG|Skull
Food and feeding The Eurasian curlew feeds by probing soft mud for small
invertebrates, but will also pick up small
crabs and
earthworms from the surface when the opportunity arises.
Predation Eurasian curlews eggs are preyed on by foxes and raptors. In addition sheep have been recorded by the BBC nature series
Springwatch preying on the eggs. ==Status==