Wild Birds

Oriental Plovers or Dotterel (Charadrius veredus)

The Oriental Plovers, Charadrius veredus , also known as the Oriental Dotterel, is a medium-sized Charadriine plover closely related to the Caspian Plover

Description

Adult male in breeding plumage: white face, throat, and fore-crown; grey-brown hind-crown, hind-neck, and back; belly white, demarcated with narrow black band and then broad chestnut breast band merging into white throat.

Female, juvenile, and non-breeding male: generally grey-brown upperparts and white belly; pale face with white streak above eye.

Measurements: length 21-25 cm; wingspan 46-53 cm; weight 95 g.

Distribution

Oriental Plovers breed in Mongolia, eastern Russia, and Manchuria; and migrate through eastern China and South-East Asia to Indonesia and Australia. Rare in New Guinea; straggler to New Zealand.

Habitat

Breeding habitat: deserts, arid grasslands, and saltpans. Non-breeding habitat: grasslands, salt fields, and coastal areas.

Food

Mainly insects.

Breeding

Not well known.

Conservation

With a large range and no evidence of significant population decline, this species’ conservation status 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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