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In the News
The Chronicle
Sept 1, 2004
By Christine Styan
DARTMOUTH
– Fledgling piping plovers blending into the
pebbles on Horseneck Beach are part of a
success story. Working with the federally
endangered species, Lloyd Center Jamie
Bogart has spent his summer making sure
beachgoers stay away from the baby plovers
before they fly south.
Fencing and posting signs was the key to
keeping people away form the presence of the
nesting plovers. Mr. Bogart set up wire and
wood fencing around a refuge area covering
about 400 square meters of the eastern half
of the beach near the camp grounds.
Fencing in a piece of beach visited by
hundreds of beach goers every day is not an
easy task, said Mr. Bogart.
Plovers were originally hunted for their
feathers and became an endangered species in
1986 after succumbing to the human pressures
such as beach cottages being built on their
nesting grounds.
Like clockwork, the Plovers start flying
back to the South Coast area around March
14, usually nesting on the sand close to the
dunes, and laying their eggs in May or in
early June.
They want to nest close to the water to be
near to the tidal food source, said Mr.
Bogart. When nesting, they scrape with their
feet a small indentation kicking up the
sands behind them. They may make as many as
10 nesting places before they pick the one
they are going to lay their eggs.
Plovers lay about four eggs, which they
incubate for about 28 days. When they hatch,
“the hatchlings are running all over the
place,” said Mr. Bogart.
There were three breeding pairs located at
Demarest Lloyd Park and Horseneck Beach this
summer. In past years, Horseneck Beach has
had nine or ten pairs, but many didn’t come
back this year, he said.
The Lloyd Center hires interns to help track
the number or eggs. They use binoculars and
field science notebooks to keep a count of
the adults. The birds are not banded because
that would injure them. Researchers have
found that sometimes the plovers get upset
with the research inters. “We try to
minimize contact. If we go towards the
hatching eggs, the birds imitate a broken
wing, feigning an injury to get you away
from the nest,” Mr. Bogart noted.
It is remarkable this tiny bird has made any
headway after facing man-made dangers,
natural predators, and vandalism. The first
week is critical, for the plover population
has a lot of enemies, including skunks and
coyotes. Coyotes generally impact the birds
the most. “Last year, the birds received a
double whammy with the oil spill and natural
predators. All the barrier beaches have
pressures on them,” suggested Mr. Bogart.
Mr. Bogart also takes care of Gooseberry,
Demarest Lloyd and West Island nesting
areas. “I am watching the whole county. The
Audubon Society helps out at Allens Pond,
and divides up the task,” he said.
The oil spill put further stress on the
nesting places for the plovers. It is widely
known that Allens Pond was hit the hardest,
said Mr. Bogart. The plovers weren’t killed
because of the oil, but the Horseneck birds
were impacted because the eggs they laid
didn’t hatch because of the presence of the
people during the cleanup.
This year on Horseneck, only about half of
the birds returned. “Was this due to the oil
spill or all those people in yellow coats
running around? This is speculation,” said
Mr. Bogart. The Horseneck preservation
project has suffered some vandalism to the
fences. “We can’t see everything that goes
on, and it happens sometimes because of
people letting their dog run loose,” said
Mr. Bogart.
To let a dog run loose is against the law in
any area that has nesting plovers and the
owner has the liability. Fines can be
imposed. “During the course of the season,
people don’t realize that a loose or leashed
dog is really a scary thing for the plover,”
he said.
One year at Horseneck, a pair of plovers
chose a nesting site in one of the pavement
cracks close to the parking area, providing
what Mr. Bogart suggested was one of the
amazing pairs in his career. Mobs of people
had to be inconvenienced to protect the
plovers, he noted. The birds eventually
became accustomed to the people walking by,
and they successfully hatched a handful of
nestlings. Mr. Bogart was thrilled that
three hatchlings were successfully born on
Horseneck this summer. The hatchlings were
late this year and may have come from a
second nesting period.
Truly a home on beach sand and along the
water’s edge, the three young birds scurried
along Horseneck Beach and quickly became
almost invisible to the eye. For Mr. Bogart,
it is a heart-warming sight.“This is a step
in the right direction again. It seems to be
if they raise their children here, they may
come back,” he suggested.
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