No. There are many civils that have "crossed over". A ChemE from time to time and a few mechanicals too. However it is my considered opinion that civils are actually better at pipeline design, especially outside of pump and compressor stations, but I work inside and out. Almost everything you do outside of a pump station is directly related to civil engineering. Erosion control, road and river crossings, slope stability, fault crossings, cadastral and geotechnical surveys, pavement replacements, access roads, fence installations, concrete support pads for block valve stations, UTM to Lat,Long conversions, Township and Ranges, property boundry determination, reading side-scan sonar plots, routing, point of intersections, vertical curves, estimating how long it's going to take and what are the best machine to use to cut a slope, drainage culvert design, how plastic the clay is, bending stress for a pipe on an semi-infinite support, pipe support design, specing a prefab meter building. I don't know any mechanical engineers that are any good at any of that. And not a one of them I know can tell me when the aligators are hungry and I shouldn't go near the water!
"People will work for you with blood and sweat and tears if they work for what they believe in......" - Simon Sinek