Wild Birds

Lesser Sand-Plover

Lesser Sand-Plover Charadrius Mongolus

The Lesser Sand Plover, Charadrius Mongolus, is a small wader in the plover family of birds. The spelling is commonly given as Lesser Sand Plover, but the official British Ornithologists’ Union spelling is Lesser Sand Plover.

 

There are five races, and the large east Asian forms, C. m. mongolus and C. m. stegmanni, are sometimes given specific status as Mongolian Plover, Charadrius mongolus.

Lesser Sand-Plover Looking for Food
Lesser Sand-Plover Looking for Food

If the taxonomic split is accepted, Lesser Sandplover as then defined becomes Charadrius atrifrons, including the three races atrifrons, paresis, and Schaefer.

Distribution / Range

It breeds above the tree line in the Himalayas and discontinuously across bare coastal plains in north-eastern Siberia, with the Mongolian Plover in the eastern part of the range; it has also bred in Alaska. It nests in a bare ground scrape, laying three eggs.

This species is strongly migratory, wintering on sandy beaches in East Africa, South Asia, and Australasia. It is a very rare vagrant in Western Europe, but, surprisingly, of the three individuals recorded in Great Britain up to 2003, one was a Mongolian Plover.

 

Description / Range

This chunky plover is long-legged and long-billed. Breeding males have grey backs and white underparts. The breast, forehead, and nape are chestnut, and there is a black eye mask. The female is duller, and winter and juvenile birds lack the chestnut, apart from a hint of rufous on the head. Legs are dark and the bill black.

In all plumages, this species is very similar to the Greater Sand Plover, Charadrius leschenaultii. Separating the species may be straightforward in mixed wintering flocks on an Indian beach, where the difference in size and structure is obvious; it is another thing altogether to identify a lone vagrant in Western Europe, where both species are very rare.

The problem is compounded in that the Middle Eastern race of Greater Sandplover is the most similar to Lesser.

Lesser Sand-Plover Resting
Lesser Sand-Plover Resting

Lesser usually has darker legs, a white forehead, and a more even white wing bar than greater.

 

Diet / Feeding

The Lesser Sand Plover’s food is insects, crustaceans, and annelid worms, which are obtained by a run-and-pause technique, rather than the steady probing of some other wader groups. This species takes fewer steps and shorter pauses than Greater when feeding.

Call / Vocalization

The flight call is a hard trill.

Status

The Lesser Sand Plover is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.

References

  1. BirdLife International (2004). Charadrius mongolus. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 05 May 2006. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Gordon Ramel

Gordon is an ecologist with two degrees from Exeter University. He's also a teacher, a poet and the owner of 1,152 books. Oh - and he wrote this website.

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