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Overview

Distribution

Geographic Range

Charadrius alexandrinus breeds on most continents. In North America they breed locally in the western interior and on the Pacific and Gulf coasts. They also breed on the islands in the Caribbean and on coasts in Central America. In South America, they breed on the Humboldt Current coast and on the western coast. In Eurasia, breeding is more widespread in the interior and they also occur on the coasts of Asia, Europe, and northern Africa.

(Paulson, 1993)

Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native ); neotropical (Native )

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Physical Description

Morphology

Physical Description

Charadrius alexandrinus are one of the smallest plovers, but they have proportionally longer legs. Plumage varies throughout the world with the American Snowy Plover being the palest. The upper parts of the body are pale in color. Breeding males have a small white forehead, black forecrown band, and a slightly reddish colored hindcrown. There is also a black eye band below a slim white brow. Male Snowy Plovers display a black shoulder patch and a complete white collar. Under parts of the bird are wholly white. Female Snowy Plovers have the same pattern as the male, but brown areas replace the black areas. In both sexes, the legs are dark gray, the eyes are large and black, and the bill is black and slender. North American Snowy Plovers have the same general pattern as Kentish Plovers (the name of Snowy Plovers in Europe), but the upper parts of the North American bird are a pale sandy gray color, and the breeding males have a pale fawn hindcrown. The legs are also a paler color in Snowy Plovers than in Kentish Plovers. In flight, Snowy Plovers can be distinguished by their narrow white wing stripe and a partial dark bar at the tip of their tail (  picture).

(Richards, 1988)

Range mass: 34 to 58 g.

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Ecology

Habitat

Habitat and Ecology

Habitat and Ecology
Behaviour Although some populations of this species are sedentary or only disperse short distances1, most inland and northern coastal populations3 are fully migratory and have distinct separate breeding and wintering ranges1. The species occupies its breeding grounds chiefly from March to October3, dispersing from late-June immediately after the young fledge, with the southward migration peaking in September1. The species nests solitarily or in loose semicolonial groups1, 2, 4, usually in densities of 0.5 to 20 pairs per hectare (exceptionally up to 100 pairs per hectare)2, and sometimes in association with other species (e.g. Least Tern Sterna antillarum)12. Outside of the breeding season5 the species feeds singly7 or in small flocks of 20-30 individuals1, 5, and occasionally in larger flocks of up to 260 individuals4, often roosting in large mixed-species flocks4. Habitat During all seasons the species is predominantly coastal1, 2, 3 and is usually found on sand, silt or dry mud surfaces1, generally avoiding very exposed oceanic coastlines5 and rocky or broken ground1. It also shows a preference for sparsely vegetated and sandy areas when breeding2. Typical habitats include sandy, pebbly or muddy shores2, 3, 6, dunes2, coastal lagoons1, coastal marshes (China)7, tropical shores of coral limestone2, estuaries and tidal mudflats (Africa)4. It is uncommon on freshwater, even when migrating3, but frequently occurs on inland habitats not far from the coast such as seasonal watercourses1, open flats near brackish or saline lakes1, 3, salt-pans1, 6, salty steppes with scattered grasses2, sandy deserts2, pebbly or muddy plains2, gravel pits1, and less frequently sandy riverbanks (Africa)2, 4, 6, sandy pond margins6 and barren reservoir shores1, 2. Diet Its diet consists mainly of insects and their larvae1, 2 (e.g. beetles and flies)1, gammarids2, crabs4, other crustaceans1 and brine shrimps2, bivalve and univalve molluscs1, 2, polychaete worms1, 2, spiders1 and small pieces of seaweed4. Breeding site The nest is a shallow scrape1 positioned near water on bare earth or in sparse vegetation1, often on slightly raised ground5 and partly sheltered by plants5 or near conspicuous objects such as grass clumps or shrubs2. The species nests in semicolonial groups, with nests spaced between 2 and 5 m (western Paleartic)5 or more than 20 m apart (up to 80 m)1. Management information Shallowly flooding a previously dry habitat at Owens Lake, California, was found to attract more breeding pairs to the area and had the effect of extending the nesting season by c.1 month11. At Batiquitos Lagoon, California, creating new nesting areas from dredging spoils (e.g. coarse-grained sand and shell fragments) attracted more breeding pairs and non-breeding individuals, possibly because the new areas were covered with less debris and a smaller amount of tall vegetation than older sites12. In the Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge, Oklahoma, there is evidence that nests adjacent to herbaceous and shrub vegetation suffer significantly lower losses to flooding but significantly higher losses to mammalian predation than those 500 or 1,000 m away1, 4. In the same area artificial nest ridges (made by ploughing) and nest mounds constructed from existing materials (gravel, sand and clay) were found not to reduce nest flooding13. Predator exclusion experiments from nesting areas using electric fences in the Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge, Oklahoma13 and in Monterey Bay, California were unsuccessful in increasing the number of chicks fledged per male16 or significantly reducing annual egg predation (this was probably still limited by avian predation)13, although in Monterey Bay the hatching success of nests within the exclosure did increase16 and the overall nesting success was higher for breeding pairs within the Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge exclosures13. At Monterey Bay the predator exclosures were also not successful in increasing adult breeding numbers, and the mortality of incubating adults was actually higher within the enclosures than outside them16. On beaches in Santa Barbara, California, erecting protective barriers to direct tourist foot-traffic away from sections of upper beach was found to decrease disturbance of the species by more than half and attracted increased numbers of breeding pairs, although the distribution of the species on the beach contracted to within the protected area15.

Systems
  • Terrestrial
  • Freshwater
  • Marine
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Habitat

Snowy Plovers are primarily found on sand beaches, though they also forage on nearby mud flats, especially after breeding season. They also spend time on dune systems, coastal lagoons, inland steppes, sand deserts, tidal flats, dry salt flats, and large sandy rivers and lakes where there is little vegetation.

(Richards, 1988)

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Trophic Strategy

Food Habits

The main foods eaten by Snowy Plovers are terrestrial and aquatic invertebrates. On the Pacific Coast of North America, these include mole crabs, polychaetes, amphipods, sand hoppers, tanadacians, flies, beetles, clams, and ostracods. The foods eaten in San Francisco Bay and in freshwater ponds include flies, beetles, moths, and lepidopteran caterpillars. In saline and alkaline lakes of the Great Basin, Snowy Plovers feed on flies, beetles, hemipterans, and brine shrimp. Sources of food in salt flats of the Great Plains include flies, beetles, grasshoppers, lepidopterans, and beetles. In the Gulf Coast, the bird feeds on small crustaceans, mollusks, marine worms, aquatic insects, and seeds.

Snowy Plovers forage on beaches, tide flats, salt flats, and salt ponds. At beaches, the bird gathers food from sand surfaces, kelp, marine-mammal carcasses, and above and below the average high water line. Birds that are inland search for food on the shores of lakes, reservoirs, ponds, braided river channels, and playas.

When hunting their prey, Snowy Plovers usually pause, look, run, and then seize their prey from the surface of the beach or the tide flat. Above the high-tide line on California beaches, Snowy Plovers search for food at the bases of low growing plants. In Mono Lake, California, Snowy Plovers feed on brine fly larvae (Ephydridae). They often shake the larvae before swallowing them. The birds will sometimes lower their head and charge with their mouth open into a group of adult flies on the ground while snapping their bill. The bill snaps about two to three times to crush the captured flies before swallowing them. This charging method is also used to capture isolated insects on California beaches. Another behavior sometimes used before feeding is to tremble one foot in shallow water or on a wet substrate.

(Page et al. 1995)

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Life History and Behavior

Life Expectancy

Lifespan/Longevity

Average lifespan

Status: wild:
132 months.

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Lifespan, longevity, and ageing

Maximum longevity: 19 years (wild)
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Reproduction

Reproduction

In western North America, Snowy Plovers are facultatively polyandrous. Most Snowy Plovers breed in the first nesting season after hatching. Depending on season and location, this varies anywhere between 260-360 days after hatching.

Males solicit females from their territories by calling and standing. The male then runs to a spot in the nest and begins scraping. The female begins scraping as the male steps out, and she settles into the nest. The male bows next to the female several times with his head pointed to the ground. While bowing, he flashes the white on his tail to the female. The female then steps out of the nest to run about 0.5-2.0 m. She stands with her body fairly parallel to the ground. The male then stands directly behind her and begins kicking his legs high. He then jumps on her back. While on her back, he shifts his weight alternately from one leg to the other. Both birds then shift their tails side-to-side with increasing speed. At the moment of intercourse, the male uses his bill to grab the back of the female's neck, and both birds fall backwards with their wings flapping.

The first season of brooding varies geographically. In Puerto Rico, egg-laying begins in January. In Florida, it occurs during the last week of March. In California, egg-laying begins around the beginning of March. Depending on location, the dates of the first clutches range from the middle of March until the middle of May. There may be two or even three brooding seasons, but the last clutch will typically be laid before the middle of July.

Clutch size is normally three eggs. Eggs are laid both during the day and at night. Both sexes take turns sitting or standing over the eggs, and both sexes have a single abdominal incubation patch. Incubation period varies with location and season. On average, the incubation season is 26-32 days.

Small cracks appear up to 8 days before hatching. Tapping of the chicks can be easily heard up to 3-4 days before hatching, and peeping can be heard 1-2 days before hatching. Eggs can hatch at any time of the day or night. Young birds are precocial after hatching.

(Page et al. 1995)

Average time to hatching: 24 days.

Average eggs per season: 3.

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Molecular Biology and Genetics

Molecular Biology

Barcode data: Charadrius alexandrinus

The following is a representative barcode sequence, the centroid of all available sequences for this species. 

 
There are 9 barcode sequences available from BOLD and GenBank.  Below is a sequence of the barcode region Cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI or COX1) from a member of the species.  See the BOLD taxonomy browser for more complete information about this specimen and other sequences.
 
SIBJP056-10|USNM 641877|Charadrius alexandrinus| ------------------------------------------CTATACTTAATCTTTGGCGCATGAGCCGGTATAGTCGGTACCGCCCTC---AGCTTACTTATTCGTGCAGAACTAGGTCAACCAGGAACCCTCCTAGGCGAC---GACCAAATCTACAATGTAATTGTCACCGCCCATGCTTTCGTGATAATCTTCTTCATAGTCATACCAATCATAATCGGTGGTTTCGGAAACTGACTGGTACCACTCATA---ATTGGTGCACCAGACATAGCATTCCCACGCATAAATAACATAAGCTTTTGACTCCTACCCCCATCATTTCTTCTCCTCCTTGCATCATCCACAGTAGAAGCTGGAGCAGGCACAGGATGAACCGTATACCCGCCTCTGGCCGGTAATCTAGCCCACGCCGGGGCTTCAGTAGACCTG---GCCATCTTCTCTCTGCACCTAGCAGGTGTATCATCTATCTTAGGTGCAATCAACTTCATCACGACTGCCATTAACATAAAACCACCCGCCCTTTCACAATACCAAACTCCCCTATTCGTGTGGTCCGTACTCATTACAGCAGTCCTGTTACTCCTCTCACTTCCAGTCCTTGCTGCC---GGCATCACCATACTACTAACAGATCGAAACCTAAATACGACATTCTTTGACCCTGCCGGAGGAGGCGATCCAGTCCTATACCAGCACCTCTTCTGATTCTTCGGCCACCCAGAAGTCTACATCCTAATCCTA------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
-- end --

Download FASTA File
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Statistics of barcoding coverage: Charadrius alexandrinus

Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLDS) Stats
Public Records: 9
Species: 25
Species With Barcodes: 1

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Conservation

Conservation Status

IUCN Red List Assessment


Red List Category
LC
Least Concern

Red List Criteria

Version
3.1

Year Assessed
2009

Assessor/s
BirdLife International

Reviewer/s
Bird, J., Butchart, S.

Contributor/s

Justification
This species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence <20,000 km2 combined with a declining or fluctuating range size, habitat extent/quality, or population size and a small number of locations or severe fragmentation). Despite the fact that the population trend appears to be decreasing, the decline is not believed to be sufficiently rapid to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion (>30% decline over ten years or three generations). The population size is very large, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population size criterion (<10,000 mature individuals with a continuing decline estimated to be >10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure). For these reasons the species is evaluated as Least Concern.

History
  • 2008
    Least Concern
  • 2004
    Least Concern
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Conservation Status

Breeding populations of Snowy Plovers along the Pacific Coast of U.S. and Baja California are listed as threatened by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Snowy Plovers are also threatened in Oregon, Florida, and Puerto Rico. They are endangered in Washington, and Alabama. They are a species of special concern in California.

On U.S coasts, habitat degradation, caused by recreation and expanding beach-front development, has caused a decline in the size of breeding populations.

Some beaches have been closed in Oregon to protect the Snowy Plovers' breeding grounds. Individual nests in coastal Oregon and Monterey Bay, California, has been fenced in to improve hatching success in those areas. There has been a removal of feral red foxes by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Monterey Bay, California to improve adult and chick survival rates.

(Page et al. 1995)

US Migratory Bird Act: protected

US Federal List: threatened ; no special status

CITES: no special status

State of Michigan List: no special status

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: least concern

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Status in Egypt

Resident breeder, regular passage visitor and winter visitor.

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IUCN

Least Concern.

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Threats

Threats

Major Threats
The species is threatened by the disturbance of coastal habitats (e.g. tourists trampling nests and disturbing roosts on beaches)15. It is also threatened by the degradation and loss of wetland habitat through environmental pollution9, 10, land reclamation1, 10, declining river flows9, 10 (from water abstraction), unsustainable harvesting of benthic fauna9, 10, urbanisation1 and a reduction in the amount of sediment being carried into coastal areas by rivers10. The species is susceptible to avian botulism, so may be threatened by future outbreaks of the disease8.
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Wikipedia

Kentish Plover

The Kentish Plover, Charadrius alexandrinus, is a small wader in the plover bird family. Despite its name, this species no longer breeds in Kent, or even Great Britain. It breeds in a wide range, from southern Europe to Japan and in Ecuador, Peru, Chile, the southern United States and the Caribbean.[1]

The North American Committee of the American Ornithologists' Union and the IOC World Bird List have voted on or before July 2011 to split the American forms into a new species Snowy Plover, however, no other committee has voted to change taxonomy yet. In that light, the American forms can now be found under a separate species listing Snowy Plover,[2]however all forms can still be found here until further actions are taken.

Characteristics

The Kentish Plover is 15–17 cm long. It is smaller, paler, longer-legged and thinner-billed than Ringed Plover or Semipalmated Plover. Its breast band is never complete, and usually just appears as dark lateral patches on the sides of the breast. The Kentish Plover's upperparts are greyish brown and the underparts white in all plumages. The breast markings are black in summer adults, otherwise brown. Breeding males of some races have a black forehead bar and a black mask through the eye. The legs are black. In flight, the flight feathers are blackish with a strong white wing bar. The flight call is a sharp bip.

This species breeds on sandy coasts and brackish inland lakes, and is uncommon on fresh water. It nests in a ground scrape and lays three to five eggs.

The breeding birds in warmer countries are largely sedentary, but northern and inland populations are migratory, wintering south to the tropics.[1] Food is insects and other invertebrates, which are obtained by a run-and-pause technique, rather than the steady probing of some other wader groups.

This bird has six geographical races. The most distinctive are the two that breed in the Americas, collectively called the Snowy Plover. They are shorter-legged, paler and greyer above than the Old World subspecies, and breeding males lack a rufous cap. The eyemask is also poorly developed or absent. Genetic research published in 2009 strongly suggests that the Snowy Plover is a separate species.[3]

The Indian and Sri Lankan breeding form also lacks a rufous cap, and has only a weak eyemask.

The Kentish Plover is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.

The western snowy plover (Charadrius alexandrinus nivosus syn. Charadrius nivosus) breeds from Texas and Oklahoma west to California and up the coastline to Oregon and Washington, with the coastal form's primary breeding concentration in central and southern California.[4] The Pacific Coast population has been designated a Threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.

In many parts of the world, it had become difficult for this species to breed on beaches because of disturbance from the activities of humans or their animals. The University of California, Santa Barbara, is currently endeavoring to rehabilitate snowy plover populations by protecting beaches along the central California coastline that runs along part of the university campus.[5] UCSB has had some success in encouraging reproduction; the university also often trains students and other volunteers to watch over protected beaches during the daytime to ensure no one disturbs nesting grounds.

References

  1. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2009). "Charadrius alexandrinus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.1. International Union for Conservation of Nature. http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/144107. Retrieved December 6, 2010. 
  2. ^ Chesser, R. Terry; Banks, Richard C.; Barker, F. Keith; Cicero, Carla; Dunn, Jon L.; Kratter, Andrew W.; Lovette, Irby J.; Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Remsen, J. V.; Rising, James D.; Stotz, Douglas F.; Winker, Kevin (2011). "Fifty-second supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-List of North American Birds". Auk 128 (3): 600–613. doi:10.1525/auk.2011.128.3.600. 
  3. ^ Küpper, Clemens; Augustin, Jakob; Kosztolányi, András; Burke, Terry; Figuerola, Jordy; Székely, Tamás (2009). "Kentish versus Snowy Plover: phenotypic and genetic analyses of Charadrius alexandrinus reveal divergence of Eurasian and American subspecies" (PDF). The Auk (American Ornithologists' Union) 126 (4). http://www.bath.ac.uk/bio-sci/biodiversity-lab/publications/kupper_auk_2009.pdf. 
  4. ^ "Recovery Plan for the Pacific Coast Population of the Western Snowy Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus nivosus)" (PDF). U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. http://www.fws.gov/arcata/es/birds/WSP/documents/RecoveryPlanWebRelease_09242007/WSP%20Final%20RP%2010-1-07.pdf. Retrieved October 1, 2009. 
  5. ^ "2003 UCSB Press Release on snowy plovers". World Heritage. http://www.instadv.ucsb.edu/pa/display.aspx?pkey=1036. Retrieved May 21, 2007. 
  • Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 49: 103. 
  • Micronesica 32: 257. 
  • Museum of Texas Tech University Occasional Papers 239: 1. 
  • Hayman, Peter; Marchant, John; Prater, Tony (1986). Shorebirds: an identification guide to the waders of the world. Croom Helm. ISBN 0-7099-2034-2. 
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