Noisy neighbors

If a contest were held for the bird that makes the loudest racket in our region, the killdeer would probably win.  Finding one is not a chore, because it calls attention to itself with piercing and repeated cries, from which it gets its name. (Its latin name, Charadrius vociferus, is quite descriptive, too.)

The killdeer is technically a “shorebird†— the largest member of the plover family in our area. But it is the most adaptable of its kind, and just as likely to be found away from any shore as it is near the shore. For that reason, it is the only plover regularly found in our area, and the only one that breeds here.

Killdeer inhabit pastures, fields, meadows, and even parking lots and rooftops. They will readily place a nest on open gravel as well as in grass. A characteristic place I have seen them is in the fields around Paley’s farm in Sharon; I’m sure there are other favored spots, too, in our area.

In flight (when it frequently calls noisily), the killdeer is a remarkably nimble, swift bird. It has long, pointed wings that give it the ability to change direction quickly. On the ground, the killdeer typically has a fairly upright posture. It has brown upperparts and white underparts, but by far its most diagnostic field mark are two black rings around its neck.

Often visible at rest is the killdeer’s cinnamon-colored rump. This becomes more obvious when the bird is in flight.

Without a doubt, the killdeer’s greatest claim to fame is its “broken-wing display.† If a predator or other threat approaches too close to the killdeer’s nest, the parent will call attention to itself by feigning a broken wing, gradually luring the intruder away from the nest.

Come September, our noisy neighbors will remove themselves to warmer climates, but they’ll be among our earliest spring visitors when they return.

Fred Baumgarten is a writer and naturalist living in Sharon. He can be reached at fredb58@sbcglobal.net.

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