common ringed plover
{{Short description|Species of bird}}
{{Speciesbox
| image = Common ringed plover (Charadrius hiaticula) Oppdal.jpg
| image_caption = AdultFile:Ringed Plover (Charadrius hiaticula) (W1CDR0001530 BD2).ogg, England]]
| status = LC
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| taxon = Charadrius hiaticula
| range_map = Charadrius hiaticula map.svg
}}
The common ringed plover or ringed plover (Charadrius hiaticula) is a species of bird in the family Charadriidae. It breeds across much of northern Eurasia, as well as Greenland.
Taxonomy
The common ringed plover was formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the current binomial name Charadrius hiaticula.{{cite book | last=Linnaeus | first=Carl | author-link=Carl Linnaeus | year=1758 | title= Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis | volume=1 | edition=10th | page=150 | publisher=Laurentii Salvii | location=Holmiae (Stockholm) | language=Latin | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/727057 }} Linnaeus specified the type locality as "Europa & America" but this is now restricted to Sweden.{{ cite book | editor-last=Peters | editor-first=James Lee | editor-link=James L. Peters | year=1934 | title=Check-List of Birds of the World | volume=2 | publisher=Harvard University Press | place=Cambridge, Massachusetts | page=247 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14483060 }} The specific epithet hiaticula is late Medieval Latin for a plover.{{ cite web | last=Jobling | first=James A. | title=hiaticula | work=The Key to Scientific Names | url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/key-to-scientific-names/search?q=hiaticula | publisher=Cornell Lab of Ornithology | access-date=13 February 2025 }}
Three subspecies are recognised:{{cite web| editor1-last=Gill | editor1-first=Frank | editor1-link=Frank Gill (ornithologist) | editor2-last=Donsker | editor2-first=David | editor3-last=Rasmussen | editor3-first=Pamela | editor3-link=Pamela C. Rasmussen | date=August 2024 | title=Buttonquail, thick-knees, sheathbills, plovers, oystercatchers, stilts, painted-snipes, jacanas, Plains-wanderer, seedsnipes | work=IOC World Bird List Version 14.2 | url=https://www.worldbirdnames.org/bow/buttonquail/ | publisher=International Ornithologists' Union | access-date=13 February 2025 }}
- C. h. psammodromus Salomonsen, 1930 – Arctic of North Atlantic: Ellesmere Island and Baffin Island (northeast Canada, sporadic); Greenland, Iceland, Faroe Islands and Svalbard (north of Norway)
- C. h. hiaticula Linnaeus, 1758 – temperate east North Atlantic region: British Isles and northwest France to south Scandinavia and Baltic States
- C. h. tundrae (Lowe, 1915) – Arctic Ocean coasts, islands: north Scandinavia to Chukchi Peninsula (northeast Siberia) including Novaya Zemlya and New Siberian Islands (north of northwest, northeast Russia) and St. Lawrence Island (north Bering Sea; erratic)
The subspecies C. h. psammodromus is poorly differentiated from the nominate and is not recognised by some ornithologists.{{ cite book | last1=Piersma | first1=T. | last2=Wiersma | first2=P. | year=1996 | chapter=Family Charadriidae (Plovers) | editor1-last=del Hoyo | editor1-first=J. | editor2-last=Elliott | editor2-first=A. | editor3-last=Sargatal | editor3-first=J. | title=Handbook of the Birds of the World | volume=3: Hoatzin to Auks | location=Barcelona, Spain | publisher=Lynx Edicions | isbn=978-84-87334-20-7 | pages=384–443 [425] | chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/handbookofbirdso0003unse/page/425/mode/1up | chapter-url-access=registration }}
Description
Adults are {{convert|17|–|19.5|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length with a {{convert|35|–|41|cm|in|abbr=on}} wingspan. They have a grey-brown back and wings, a white belly, and a white breast with one black neckband. They have a brown cap, a white forehead, a black mask around the eyes and a short orange and black bill. The legs are orange and only the outer two toes are slightly webbed, unlike the slightly smaller but otherwise very similar semipalmated plover, which has all three toes slightly webbed, and also a marginally narrower breast band; it was in former times included in the present species. Juvenile ringed plovers are duller than the adults in colour, with an often incomplete grey-brown breast band, a dark bill and dull yellowish-grey legs.
This species differs from the smaller little ringed plover in leg colour, the head pattern, and the lack of an obvious yellow eye-ring.
Distribution and habitat
The common ringed plover's breeding habitat is open ground on beaches or flats across northern Eurosiberia and in Arctic northeast Canada. Some birds breed inland, and in western Europe they nest as far south as northern France. They nest on the ground in an open area with little or no plant growth.
Common ringed plovers are migratory and winter in coastal areas south to Africa. In Norway, geolocators have revealed that adult breeding birds migrate to West Africa.{{cite journal |author1=Lislevand, T. |author2=Briedis, M. | author3=Heggøy, O. |author4=Hahn, S. | year=2017| title=Seasonal migration strategies of Common Ringed Plovers Charadrius hiaticula| journal=Ibis| volume=159| pages=225–229| doi=10.1111/ibi.12424| issue=1}} Many birds in Great Britain and northern France are resident throughout the year.
Behaviour and ecology
=Breeding=
Common ringed plovers breed from one year of age. They are seasonally monogamous and the pair-bond is sometimes maintained from one year to the next. They are solitary nesters and are territorial. Egg laying generally begins in May but the date varies depending on the region. The nest is a shallow scrape lined with pebbles and pieces of vegetation. The clutch is of 3 to 4 eggs. The eggs are laid of intervals of 1 to 3 days and are incubated by both parents beginning after the last or penultimate egg. They hatch after 21 to 27 days. The downy chicks are grey-buff mottled with cinnamon-buff above and white below. The young are precocial and nidifugous. They are cared for by both parents and can feed themselves. While small they are brooded at night and in bad weather. They fledge when aged around 24 days.
If a potential predator approaches the nest, the adult will walk away from the scrape, calling to attract the intruder and feigning a broken wing.{{sfn|Cramp|1983|pp=136-136}}
=Food and feeding=
Conservation status
The common ringer plover has an extremely large range with a large population size and is therefore evaluated by the International Union for Conservation of Nature to be of "Least Concern". The common ringed plover is one of the taxa to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.{{ cite web | title=Species | publisher=Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds | url=https://www.unep-aewa.org/en/species | access-date=14 February 2025 }}
Gallery
File:Charadrius hiaticula mating.jpg|Mating behaviour
File:Ringed plover (Charadrius hiaticula) juvenile.jpg|Juvenile
File:Ringedplovjuly2008.jpg|Adult
File:Ringed plovers (Charadrius hiaticula) in flight.jpg|Flock in flight, with ruddy turnstones
File:Charadrius hiaticula hiaticula MHNT.ZOO.2010.11.109.15.jpg|Charadrius hiaticula hiaticula - MHNT
File:Sandlóuungi 122613 (cropped).jpg|Charadrius hiaticula chick in Iceland
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
{{refbegin}}
- {{ cite book | editor1-last=Cramp | editor1-first=Stanley | editor1-link=Stanley Cramp | year=1983 | chapter=Charadrius hiaticula Ringed Plover | title=Handbook of the Birds of Europe the Middle East and North Africa. The Birds of the Western Palearctic | volume=III: Waders to Gulls | location=Oxford | publisher=Oxford University Press | isbn=978-0-19-857506-1 | pages=129–141 }}
{{refend}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160305072802/http://aulaenred.ibercaja.es/wp-content/uploads/169_RingedPloverChiaticula.pdf Ageing and sexing (PDF; 3.9 MB) by Javier Blasco-Zumeta & Gerd-Michael Heinze]
- [https://sabap2.adu.org.za/docs/sabap1/245.pdf Ringed plover species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds]
- {{BirdLife|22693759|Charadrius hiaticula}}
- {{Avibase|name=Charadrius hiaticula}}
- {{EBirdSpecies|corplo|Common Ringed Plover}}
- {{VIREO|ringed+plover|Ringed plover}}
- {{IUCN_Map|22693759/166263388|Charadrius hiaticula}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q26816}}
{{Authority control}}