| Description  The black oystercatcher is about 15-19 inches in length. It has a stocky black body; yellow eyes surrounded by a red ring; a long, bright red-orange bill; and pink legs. Males and females look alike. Range  The black oystercatcher is found from the Aleutian Islands in Alaska southward along the Pacific Coast to Baja California. 
 
   
 Habitat
The black oystercatcher lives on rocky coasts.
 Diet  The black oystercatcher eats a variety of invertebrate marine life including mussels, whelks, and limpets. Despite its name, it rarely eats oysters! It especially likes to eat creatures that cling to the rocks below the high-tide line. It usually forages at low tide and rests at high tide. It uses its long, sharp bill to pry bivalves like limpets and mussels off the rocks and then  to open them. It also looks for open mussels and disables them by stabbing the adductor muscle that holds the shell together. This keeps the shell open. The oystercatcher then pulls out the contents with the tip of its sharp bill and swallows its catch. |  | 
              
                              Life Cycle  The female black oyster catcher lays two to three eggs among pebbles in a shallow, rocky depression, or in a hollow on the beach above the high tide line. The nest is built by both the male and the female. They  create a scrape, or depression, in the ground and then pick up and toss shells and bits of rocks and pebbles into the depression with a backwards or sideways flip of their heads. They  use the same nest year-after-year. Both the male and the female take turns incubating the eggs. 
 
  The eggs incubate for 24-29 days and the chicks fledge in about 35 days. The chicks remain close to the nest at first. One  parent  stays with them while the other parent forages for food to bring back to the nest. Eventually, the chicks  go with their parents to feeding areas. The chicks fledge at about five weeks and  forage on their own, but they are still fed by their parents. The female has one brood a year. 
 Behavior   Black oystercatchers are non-migratory. They may move a little in the spring and fall, but  usually remain close to their nesting area. |