Answer | % Correct |
---|---|
Australian Pied Oystercatcher | 100%
|
Australian pratincole | 100%
|
Banded stilt | 100%
|
Beach stone-curlew | 100%
|
Bush stone-curlew | 100%
|
Comb-crested jacana | 100%
|
Eastern curlew | 100%
|
Great knot | 100%
|
Grey-tailed tattler | 100%
|
Hooded plover | 100%
|
Little ringed plover | 100%
|
Marsh sandpiper | 100%
|
Masked lapwing | 100%
|
Oriental plover | 100%
|
Pectoral sandpiper | 100%
|
Red-capped plover | 100%
|
Red-kneed dotterel | 100%
|
Red-necked avocet | 100%
|
Red-necked phalarope | 100%
|
Ruddy turnstone | 100%
|
Sanderling | 100%
|
Sharp-tailed sandpiper | 100%
|
Sooty Oystercatcher | 100%
|
White-headed stilt | 100%
|
Wood sandpiper | 100%
|
Common greenshank | 67%
|
Inland dotterel | 67%
|
Little curlew | 67%
|
Australian painted snipe | 50%
|
Black-tailed godwit | 50%
|
Broad-billed sandpiper | 50%
|
Greater sand-plover | 50%
|
Grey plover | 50%
|
Lesser sand-plover | 50%
|
Red-necked stint | 50%
|
Terek sandpiper | 50%
|
Wandering tattler | 50%
|
Whimbrel | 50%
|
Common redshank | 33%
|
Swinhoe's snipe | 25%
|
Asian dowitcher | 0%
|
Banded lapwing | 0%
|
Bar-tailed godwit | 0%
|
Black-fronted dotterel | 0%
|
Common sandpiper | 0%
|
Curlew sandpiper | 0%
|
Double-banded plover | 0%
|
Latham's snipe | 0%
|
Little stint | 0%
|
Long-toed stint | 0%
|
Oriental pratincole | 0%
|
Pacific golden plover | 0%
|
Pin-tailed snipe | 0%
|
Red knot | 0%
|
Ruff | 0%
|
Copyright H Brothers Inc, 2008–2024
Contact Us | Go To Top | View Desktop Site