News and Information
PIPING PLOVER MONITORING
Piping
Plovers
Town Biologists conduct piping plover surveys from August to April of each year. Records are kept of the number of birds seen,
their location, behaviors, and habitat in which they are found. Additionally, banded birds are reported to the Bird Banding
Laboratory to aid in efforts to better understand the migration and wintering patterns of piping plovers. Piping plovers are
most common on the extreme western and eastern ends of the island.
Town of Kiawah Island
21 Beachwalker Drive
Kiawah Island, SC 29455
(843) 768-9166
Piping plovers (Charadrius melodus) are small, stocky shorebirds, found on Kiawah Island beaches during the fall, winter and spring.
Its distinguishing characteristics are yellow-orange legs; short, stubby black bill; and gray, sand-colored upperparts. During the
breeding season, piping plovers are a little more striking, with a black band across the forehead, a black ring around the base of
its neck, and an orange bill with a black tip.
View Plover Sighting Locations from March 2006 - April 2010 in Google Earth on the map below. If prompted, please download the Google Earth Plugin to view the data.