Black Oystercatcher
Black Oystercatcher has surged: up 205% on the route-weighted index since 1973.
About the Black Oystercatcher
The Black Oystercatcher (Haematopus bachmani) is a North American member of the Oystercatchers (Haematopodidae). In this analysis it is grouped with the shorebirds.
- Size
- 15.5–17.5 in long (40–45 cm) — a large, heavy-billed shorebird (typical for the family)
- Habitat
- Shorelines, mudflats, beaches, flooded fields and wet meadows.
- Diet
- Invertebrates probed or picked from mud, sand and shallow water.
- Range
- Recorded on 14 Breeding Bird Survey routes across 3 states, most concentrated in the Northern Pacific Rainforest.
- Family
- Haematopodidae · Shorebirds
Notable Black Oystercatcher TrendsNotable signalsLong-arc shifts the engine flags automatically — sustained declines or increases large enough to stand out from year-to-year noise.Full methodology →
No notable trend signals for Black Oystercatcher. See the full index history below.
Black Oystercatcher Population Forecast
If the recent trend holds, Black Oystercatcher is projected to stay roughly flat through 2029, near 0.00 (95% range 0.00–0.01). A 5-year backtest shows a typical error of ±95.7%, with 100% of held-out values landing inside the 95% band.
Where the Black Oystercatcher Is Detected
BBS routes recording Black Oystercatcher, sized by most recent count.
Black Oystercatcher Population Trend by State
Black Oystercatcher Population Trend by Region
Bird Conservation Regions are the ecological unit for trends.
Black Oystercatcher Conservation Status
Our route-weighted index shows it up about 205% since 1973. Many shorebirds have declined steeply, reflecting pressure on the coastal and wetland stopovers they depend on.
Source: USGS North American Breeding Bird Survey, retrieved 2026-05-22. Trend is a route-weighted relative-abundance index, not an absolute population.