Family Scolopacidae includes the sandpipers, shanks, snipes, godwits and curlews. Systematic classifications of shorebirds
at the higher level have been successfully resolved. Nevertheless, the phylogeny of shorebirds in the familial level is still
poorly understood. Thus, this phylogenetic study on Scolopacidae was conducted upon the framework provided by the first
sequence-based species-level phylogeny within the shorebirds to determine the phylogenetic relationships among family
members of Scolopacidae in West Borneo, Sarawak using combined gene markers, mtDNA Cytochrome Oxidise I (COI)
and nucDNA Recombinant Activating Gene 1 (RAG1). A total of 1,342 base pair (bp) were inferred from both COI and RAG1
gene from 45 sequences constituted of 15 species Scolopacidae sampled from Sarawak namely Xenus cinereus, Actitis
hypoleucos, Tringa totanus, Tringa glareola, Tringa stagnatilis, Heteroscelus brevipes, Calidris alba, Calidris ruficollis,
Calidris ferruginea, Calidris tenuirostris, Calidris alpina, Gallinago stenura, Gallinago megala, Numenius arquata, and
Numenius phaeopus. The phylogenetic tree was constructed with Charadrius mongulus derived as an outgroup. The
Bayesian Inference (BI) tree constructed supported grouping of species into several lineages of Numeniinae, Calidrinae,
Scolopacinae and Tringinae. The groupings of species into several lineages correlate with morphological features that
contribute to their adaptation and ability of the species to fit to their ecosystems.