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Great Lakes & Northern great Plains Piping Plover
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Great Lakes & Northern great Plains Piping Plover
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Last modified
2/21/2013 2:28:47 PM
Creation date
1/30/2013 2:04:50 PM
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Template:
Water Supply Protection
Description
Great Lakes & Northern Great Plains Piping Plover Recovery Plan related to the Platte River Endangered Species Partnership (aka Platte River Recovery Implementation Program or PRRIP)
State
CO
NE
WY
Basin
South Platte
Water Division
1
Date
5/12/1988
Author
Department of the Interior, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Title
Great Lakes & Northern Great Plains Piping Plover Recovery Plan
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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Life History <br />Breeding chronology and behavior: Piping Plovers are <br />migratory shorebirds that spend approximately 3 -4 months on <br />northern U.S. and southern Canadian breeding sites. In North - <br />Dakota, birds begin arriving on breeding grounds in mid -April <br />(Prindiville 1986); by mid -May, most Piping Plovers have returned <br />to North Dakota, Minnesota, Manitoba, and other inland sites <br />(Prindiville 1986, Wiens 1986, Haig 1985). Courtship behavior <br />includes aerial flights, digging of several nest scrapes and a <br />ritualized stone - tossing behavior (Cairns 1977, 1982; S. Haig, <br />National Zoo). Finished nest cups, frequently lined with small <br />pebbles or shell fragments are shallow depressions approximately <br />two cm deep and six cm in diameter. Territories are actively <br />defended by both adults. Egg laying commences the second or <br />third week of May. Females lay an egg every other day until a <br />four -egg clutch is complete. Both sexes share incubation duties <br />which last for 25 -31 days (Wilcox 1959, Cairns 1977, Prindiville <br />1986, Wiens 1986, Haig and Oring 1988a). In Manitoba, incubation <br />began with the laying of the first egg (Haig 1987a) while Cairns <br />(1977) did not report the onset of incubation in Nova Scotia <br />until the third egg was laid. Cairns reported equal division of <br />incubation duties between the sexes, but males in Manitoba <br />assumed more diurnal incubation duties during laying and just <br />prior to hatch than females (S. Haig, National Zoo). <br />17 <br />
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