More Success! Young Pennsylvania Plover Spotted in Florida on Inaugural Migration

The banded bird, which fledged this summer, was part of the state's first Piping Plover brood in 60 years.

It was an unseasonably cool morning on Halloween when Doris and Pat Leary hiked across McClamory Key, a small island off the northwestern side of the Florida peninsula, and discovereda flock of shorebirds. Since 1999, the Florida couple have been monitoring and surveying migrant and wintering Piping Plovers in northeast Florida, and for the past eleven years,along Florida's upper gulf coast.This timethey'd foundeight Piping Plovers, three of which were banded.

This wasn’t particularly unusual; the Learys have reported plovers at McClamory Key through the years. It wasn’t until they got home and submitted the string of identifying characters from the plovers' ankle bandsto Alice Van Zoeren, who runs the database of Great Lakes Piping Plover band numbers, that they understood the magnitude of their discovery. “You've found a really exciting one here!” Van Zoeren wrote in an email. The bird, known as B/OO:X,B for its band sequence, hatched from the first batch of Piping Plover eggs laid in Pennsylvania in 60 years, and had since traveled more than 1,200 miles from the Great Lakes toFlorida.

If this seems like a whole lot of excitement over one bird, it’s because B/OO:X,B isa symbol of the decades-long effort to revive the federally endangered species, especially along the Great Lakes. Only around 75 plover pairs currently nest in the Great Lakes, and none have laid eggs along the shores of Lake Erie since 1977—that is,until this summer, when B/OO:X,B’s parents laid dappled eggs in the sand at Gull Point.

B/OO:X,B did not hatch on Lake Erie, though; in June, a storm flooded the beachand nearly washed out the nest.Quick to act, ’s Mary Birdsongand wildlife biologist Tim Hopperescued the eggs, hatched them in captivity, and released them along Lake Michigan in August. (Read the full story of the rescuehere.)

The rescue and subsequent hatching made for a dramatic success story—but surviving to young adulthoodis just the beginning of a Piping Plover’s journey. Many birds do not survive their first year, and those that do typicallyhave their parents’ help to guide them on their southward migration. So the Leary’s sighting showed that B/OO:X,B, already at a disadvantage, hadmanaged to find aflock and migrate south. (Thetwo other banded birds were from Michigan, where the youngploverhad been released.)

“There’s so many long odds that it was able to survive at all,” says Vince Cavalieri, the Great Lakes Piping Plover Coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “To hear that it is functioning in the wild and down with other Piping Plovers in Florida—it’s very exciting, and it also shows us that our programs are working.”

For decades, conservationists—including professional scientists like Cavalieri, groups like APP Pennsylvania, andvolunteerslike the Learys—have worked to bring Piping Plovers back to beaches along the Atlantic Coast and the Great Lakes. They’ve cleared vegetation to create the fine-sand beaches preferred by plover parents and designated nesting areas off-limits to keep rowdy beachgoers away from the birds. These efforts have helped: Between 1986, when Piping Plovers were listed as endangered, and 2014, nesting pairs increased from 16 to 70 in the Great Lakes and from 550 to 1,600 along the entire Atlantic Coast.

However, protecting nesting habitat is not enough. Piping Plovers migrate south every winter, and their wintering sites need protecting, too. Currently, where they spend the colder months isn’t well known. In 2011, APP scientists discovered that many plovers winter in the Bahamas’ Joulter Cays, but that location is far from exclusive. “The Florida sighting tells us where birds that breed in Pennsylvania may spend the winter,” says Keith Russell, the program manager at APP Pennsylvania. “If a Pennsylvania breeding population is to grow, the wintering sites need to be identified and protected.”

And that’s what makes the work ofcommunity scientists like the Learysso important. There aren’t enough professional scientists to keep track of birds like B/OO:X,B, andthe knowledge gained from sightingsis a crucial component of conserving these threatened birds. “Every time you resight a bird, you can piece together the bird’s life, and identify its needs throughout its lifetime,” Julie Wraithmell, the interim executive director of , says. And in that sense, thisnewest report addsto other observations, many ofwhich made by the Learys,suggestingthat the preservation ofcertainFloridacoastal habitat could bekey to the recovery of theGreat Lakes' Piping Plovers.

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