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<br /> <br />Northern Great Plains: Past inland breeding records are <br /> <br />been irregular summer residents and migrants in Adams, Yuma, <br /> <br />Wash~ngton, and Boulder counties in Colorado. One record exists <br /> <br /> <br />for Eddy County, New Mexico (Bailey and Niedrach 1965). <br /> <br /> <br />Piping plovers have bred in the following North Dakota <br /> <br />t <br /> <br />"s <br /> <br />counties: McLean, Benson, Bottineau, Burke, Burleigh, Cass, <br /> <br />Emmons, Sioux, Mercer, Oliver, Kidder, Divide, Eddy, Grand Forks, <br /> <br />Ward, Logan, McHenry, McIntosh, McKenzie, Mountrail, Morton, <br />Nelson, Pierce, Ramsey, Renville, Sheridan, Stutsman, and <br /> <br />Williams (Stewart 1975, Haig 1986a). Breeding in South Dakota <br /> <br />occurred in the Missouri Trench counties of: Clay, Hughes, <br /> <br />Stanley, Sully, Union, and Yankton, with additional records from <br /> <br />Codington, Day, and Miner counties in the Missouri coteau (Visher <br /> <br />1915, Whitney et al. 1978). <br /> <br />Nebraska records exist for counties <br />. <br /> <br />along the Missouri, Loup, Niobrara, and Platte rivers (Bruner et <br /> <br />al. 1904, Bent 1929, Tout 1947, Moser 1940, Heinemann 1944). In <br /> <br />Iowa, Piping Plovers were regular migrants and summer residents. <br /> <br />9 <br /> <br /> <br />....... <br />