Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Fields, meadows,
pastures, mud flats, freshwater margins, occ on
coasts. Often 2 broods. DISPLAYS:
Male courtship on
ground and in air with loud calling and sham
nest-scraping movements. See:
Shorebird
Communication. NEST:
Variable. In open,
with extended view, often associates with human
habitation, or near little or no veg on soft
substrate offering camouflaging stones, gravel,
pebbles, etc., often far from water. Unlined or
lined with local materials, occ well lined with
grass. EGGS:
Buff, marked with
blackish-brown, occ wreathed or capped. 1.4" (37
mm). DIET:
About 75% insects,
remainder wide variety of invertebrates; ca. 2%
weed seeds. CONSERVATION:
Winters s to C.A.,
Caribbean, n S.A., s w to Chile. Once locally
reduced by hunting. NOTES:
Males show stronger
nest-site tenacity than do females. Mates often
retained in successive seasons. Incubating adults
belly-soak to cool eggs in hotter part of range.
Adult performs conspicuous broken-wing distraction
display. Uncommon resident
in areas providing broad expanses of bare ground or
short vegetation. Often seen around Lagunita (even
when dry if vegetation has been mown), this species
also forages on lawns, including playfields and the
Oval. Probably breeds on campus. ESSAYS: Masterbuilders;
Eggs
and Their
Evolution;
Incubation:
Heating Eggs;
Color
of Birds;
Distraction
Displays;
Site
Tenacity. REFERENCES:
Lenington and Mace,
1975; Phillips, 1972.
Charadrius vociferus Linnaeus
NG-156; G-114; PE-120; PW-pl 25; AE-pl 235; AW-pl
187; AM(I)-328
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
24-28 DAYS
PRECOCIAL
2
(3-5)
MONOG
MF
Except for Stanford Notes, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988). |