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BirdNote Daily

The Delightfully Odd Magellanic Plover

BirdNote Daily

BirdNote

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4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2023

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This quirky shorebird just has a different way of doing things.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Bergnot.

0:09.5

The Magellanic Plover is known for being a bit of an oddball.

0:13.9

For a while, scientists thought these shorebirds might be related to dubs, because Magellanic

0:18.6

Plovers feed their young with milk, produced in a part of their digestive system called

0:23.8

the crop.

0:24.8

It's a rare trait they share with dubs.

0:27.8

They even have gray feathers, pink legs, and a round body like a dove.

0:37.0

But genetic data revealed that Magellanic Plovers are neither a true plover nor a dove.

0:43.9

Instead, they're the only species in the family pluvianelody.

0:49.0

Genetically speaking, they're one of a kind.

0:52.4

Magellanic Plovers are native to southern Chile and Argentina.

0:55.8

There are probably no more than several thousand of them in the world.

1:00.3

National parks along Argentina's coast provide habitat for the species.

1:05.6

Magellanic Plovers use their strong legs to sprint across the beach and dig in the sand

1:10.8

for food.

1:12.1

The birds drink by submerging their whole heads, then throwing them backwards, unlike other

1:18.4

shorebirds which drink by delicately dipping their bills underwater.

1:23.2

This species just has a different way of doing things, and the bird world is all the

1:28.4

richer for it.

1:32.5

For bird note, I'm Ariana Remmel.

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