This bird breeds near water in the
taiga from
Finland through northern
Siberia to the
Kolyma River, and
migrate south in winter to tropical coasts in east Africa, south Asia and
Australia, usually preferring muddy areas. It is a rare vagrant in western Europe, and particularly in autumn it is sometimes seen passing through the
Marianas on migration; on
Palau, further off its usual migration route, it is decidedly uncommon on the other hand. Almost annually and apparently more and more often in recent times, a few birds stray to
Alaska and the
Aleutian and
Pribilof Islands. Every few years, individual vagrants are recorded in the
Neotropics, where they arrive either as migrating birds from Africa, or as North American strays accompanying local waders south for winter. Such vagrants have been recorded as far south as
Argentina. It feeds in a distinctive and very active way, chasing insects and other mobile prey, and sometimes then running to the water's edge to wash its catch. It lays three or four eggs in a lined ground scrape. The Terek sandpiper likes to associate with
ruddy turnstones (
Arenaria interpres), smallish
calidrids, and
Charadrius (but maybe not
Pluvialis)
plovers; a vagrant bird at
Paraty (
Rio de Janeiro state) was noted to pair up with a
spotted sandpiper (
Actitis macularius). This is one of the species to which the
Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (
AEWA) applies. Widespread and often quite commonly seen, the Terek sandpiper is not considered a threatened species by the
IUCN. ==Gallery==