| Pluvianellidae - Magellanic plover  It is not a plover, although it was placed in the Charadriidae family once. Some thought it was a sandpiper because of its bill and that it should be in the Scolopacidae family. Others thought that the way it feeds it young made it part of the dove or Columbidae family. Using DNA analysis scientists discovered that it was most closely related to the sheathbills in the Chionidae family, but that it was different enough to deserve a family of its own. The Magellanic plover is a wading bird. It is a soft dove-gray on its uppersides and white on its belly. It has a black bill, pink legs, and red eyes. It feeds on small invertebrates that it finds on the shore. It often turns over stones and pebbles looking for food, like the ruddy turnstone. It also uses its legs to dig in the mud and sand for prey. Magellanic plovers nest on the ground. The female lays two eggs, but only one usually survives. Both parents incubate the eggs and feed and care for the chick. The parents feed the chick crop milk like doves feed their chicks. The Magellanic plover is the only wading bird that uses this method to feed its chicks. World Status Key 
 
 Additional Information
 Key:   Magellanic Plover -  Pluvianellus socialis   Magellanic Plover -  Pluvianellus socialis   | |||||||||||||||



 Least Concern
Least Concern   Near Threatened
Near Threatened   Vulnerable
Vulnerable   Endangered
Endangered   Critically Endangered
Critically Endangered  Extinct in the Wild
Extinct in the Wild   Extinct
Extinct  Threatened in US
 Threatened in US   Threatened in NH
 Threatened in NH   Endangered in US
 Endangered in US   Endangered in NH
 Endangered in NH  Breeds in NH
 Breeds in NH   Introduced
 Introduced Africa
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 Antarctica   Asia
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