YOU ARE GETTING WARMER!
ALMOST, BUT NOT QUITE RIGHT!
SORRY, YOU ARE NOT EVEN CLOSE!
Piping plovers (Charadrius melodus) are federally threatened migratory shore birds found on Assateague Island that have very specific habitat requirements for nesting and raising their chicks—overwash areas. Monitoring by the park provides the clues to know how successful they are each season.
What do plovers need to nest and raise their young?
Fortunately for the plovers that migrate and stop off here, overwash is a common geomorphological process due in part to Assateague Island’s low elevations, particularly on the north end. As sea level continues to rise, storm surge is even more likely to wash completely over the island. This creates and maintains overwash pathways through dunes and vegetation that allow the birds and their small chicks to reach their preferred nesting and foraging habitat within the island interior and bayside beaches.
Without overwash, dunes and vegetation become an obstacle for small, flightless chicks trying to cross the island to reach their preferred foraging areas along the bay. Storm surge sends ocean waves over the beach and washes away dunes and vegetation, clearing a pathway to the island interior and bayside beaches. Overwash pathways—clear of vegetation but scattered with broken shells—provide excellent nesting and foraging habitat.
Camouflage protects these eggs so they blend perfectly into the background, effectively hiding them from predators.
Park biologists have placed a wire exclosure over a piping plover nest to protect it from predators. The wire mesh allows the small plovers to walk through, but keeps out large predators like fox, raccoon, crows, and gulls.
Why should we care about these tiny birds?
Piping plovers, along with other beach dwelling species that occur on Assateague Island, are excellent indicators of ecosystem health. The presence of plovers lets us know that the natural coastal processes of wind and waves are determining the condition of the island and creating habitat. Protecting habitats for federally threatened piping plovers benefits a wealth of other rare plants, birds, and insects.