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  1. Ringed plover. Scientific name: Charadrius hiaticula. The ringed plover is a small wader that nests around the coast, flooded gravel pits and reservoirs. It is similar to the little ringed plover, but is a little larger, has an orange bill and legs, and doesn't have a yellow ring around its eye.

  2. Ringed Plover. This smart, small wader can be found around most of our coast, though is less commonly encountered in the south-west of England and western Wales. Inland breeding also occurs, with pairs favouring disused gravel bits, river margins and, in Ireland, harvested peat bogs. Flooded gravel pits provide ideal breeding habitat for this ...

  3. The Ringed Plover is a small, dumpy, short-legged wading bird. It's brownish grey above and whitish below. It has an orange bill, tipped with black, orange legs and a black-and-white pattern on its head and breast. In flight, it shows a broad, white wing-stripe. They mostly breed on beaches around the coast, but they have also now begun ...

  4. Little Ringed Plover. Charadrius dubius (Scopoli, 1786) LP LIRPL 4690. Family: Charadriiformes > Charadriidae. This attractive small wading bird is a relatively new addition to the British breeding avifauna, first recorded nesting here in 1938. Little Ringed Plovers are summer visitors to Britain, sometimes arriving as early as mid-March.

    • Behaviour
    • Size
    • Status
    • Distribution
    • Facts

    Like other plovers, the ringed plover forages for invertebrates and crustaceans in a particular way: standing and watching, running forward, pecking, and standing still again. The ringed plover tempts underground prey to the surface by ‘foot-trembling’ i.e.,tapping its feet on the ground to mimic raindrops. It forages by day and night, typically in...

    Length 18-20cm
    Wingspan 35-57cm
    Weight:  55-75g
    Average Lifespan: 5 years

    Classified in the UK as Red under the Birds of Conservation Concern 4: the Red List for Birds (2015). Protected by The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

    Found around the coastline of Scotland as a widespread breeding species. Found locally inland, along rivers, estuaries and tidal flats, reservoirs and arable fields. Breeding populations tend to move only short distances in winter. The highest numbers of ringed plovers occur in May, when resident populations are joined by birds on the spring passag...

    Ringed plovers have suffered a major decline in numbers and dropped from the Amber status of conservation (1996) to the Red List (2015). Populations on the Outer Hebrides and other Western Isles ha...
    The alarm call of ringed plovers is a soft, but anxious ‘poo-ee’ with an upward inflection. During the breeding season, the aerial display is accompanied by a repeated ‘tee-leea, tee-leea…’ or ‘lee...
  5. Mar 23, 2022 · Ringed plover breed at Landguard and choose their nesting sites on the ground amongst the rare, vegetated shingle habitat. They are protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and are a Red list species, due to their declining population and are therefore a conservation priority.

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  7. A small, rotund wading bird, the Little ringed plover nests on bare gravel around flooded gravel pits, sandy riverbanks and reservoirs. Like other plovers, it forages for invertebrates and crustaceans in a particular way: standing and watching, running forward, pecking, then standing still again. It is a migrant species, arriving in this ...

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