
American Avocet
Species principle: Elegant Sifting
Sweep in arcs.
The right shape turns repeated work into grace.
American Avocets use long upcurved bills to sweep side to side through shallow water, filtering and catching small aquatic prey.
Animal Qualities
Sweep in arcs.
Animals grouped here express a similar quality through their behavior in nature. Each species still has its own principle, lesson, meaning, and field-guide page.
4 species

Species principle: Elegant Sifting
Sweep in arcs.
The right shape turns repeated work into grace.
American Avocets use long upcurved bills to sweep side to side through shallow water, filtering and catching small aquatic prey.

Species principle: Reef Shaping
Bite the reef into sand.
Tiny repeated bites can change the shape of a whole reef.
Humphead Parrotfish use powerful beak-like teeth to bite coral and algae, contributing to reef erosion and sand production while shaping coral ecosystems.

Species principle: Dusk Harvest
Scoop the dusk.
Repeating the right motion can feed a long night.
Nacunda Nighthawks catch flying insects on the wing at dusk and night with long wings and wide gape mouths.

Species principle: Stitching
Stitch the mud.
Long journeys are crossed by small repeated movements that never lose rhythm.
Short-billed Dowitchers feed by probing mud with a rapid up-and-down motion often compared to sewing-machine stitching, and they migrate long distances as shorebirds.