The Red-necked Phalarope, a member of the shorebird family, is functionally among the world’s smallest seabirds. Smallest and daintiest of the 3 phalarope species, it spends up to 9 months of the year at sea, riding on a raft of dense belly plumage and feeding on tiny planktonic invertebrates at oceanographic fronts, convergences, and other discontinuities.
Notice how small it is by comparing it to the Semipalmated Sandpipers it is with in some of the photos.
Here's a brief video, followed by the first photo taken and 3 subsequent views.
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