St. Helena Plover

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St. Helena Plover

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Charadriidae
Genus: Charadrius
Species: C. sanctaehelenae
Binomial name
Charadrius sanctaehelenae
(Harting, 1873)
The Wirebird
The Wirebird
The Wirebird's nest and egg
The Wirebird's nest and egg

The St. Helena Plover, Charadrius sanctaehelenae, locally known as Wirebird due to its thin legs, is a small wader endemic to the island of Saint Helena. Kittlitz's Plover is the St. Helena bird's closest relative[verification needed].

The bird was first mentioned in 1638, and is the national bird of Saint Helena, featured on the island's coat of arms.

This plover is resident all year on the open areas of Saint Helena, and it is thought that the widespread deforestation on the island, while generally harmful for the island's ecosystem, has in fact benefitted this particular species, since it lives in open clearings in the forest.

St. Helena Plover numbers have been fluctuating, but in general the trend was downward since at least the 1970s. Feral cats and accidentally introduced rats, as well as the introduced Common Mynas which eat the eggs, are believed to be play a significant role in the decline of this species' population.

A census in 1988/89 recorded 450 adult[verification needed] birds, although it subsequently sharply declined from causes not fully understood and marked short-term fluctuations. Since 1998, its numbers stood at about 340 adult[verification needed] individuals. Classified as Endangered by the IUCN, it was downlisted to Vulnerable in 2004, as its numbers had apparently stabilized.

However, there was another sharp drop in numbers since then, which may be continuing. Only some 200-220 adult birds are believed to remain. The reasons remain still elusive, although it is noted that there has been an increase in off-road vehicle use and a decline in removing feral and neutering domestic cats in recent years. Construction activity has apparently dispersed some of the smaller subpopulations. The planned Saint Helena Airport would also destroy one of the major patches of remaining habitat, especially as other grassland is now slated for reforestation to aid recovery of the island's ecosystem. As a consequence of its dire status and uncertain prospects, the St. Helena Plover is uplisted to Critically Endangered with extinction in the 2007 IUCN Red List. There are currently projects underway led by the RSPB to monitor the birds and try to stop their decline.[1]

  1. ^ See BirdLife International (2007a,b).

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