Killdeer (Charadrius vociferus)

Group Plovers
Code ABNNB03090
Order Charadriiformes
Family Charadriidae
Author Linnaeus, 1758
Rank G5 (definitions)
Occurrence SM (definitions)
Scale C (definitions)

County List:

Western UP all
Eastern UP all
Northern LP all
Southern LP all

Rule:

Mixed Forested/Nonforested or Nonforested Landscapes

1st alternative:
      Any Open Water 
   adjacent to:
      Shorelines/Mudflats

2nd alternative:
      Any Open Water
   neighboring:
      (Fields/Pasture or Residential)
view decision rule term definitions

Habitat List:

Habitats Regen Sap Pole Sm Saw Lg Saw Uneven
Aspen nonononono-
Paper Birch nonononono-
Oak nononononono
Assorted Hardwoods nononononono
Northern Hardwoods nononononono
Spruce/Fir nononononono
Hemlock nononononono
Jack Pine nononononono
Red Pine nononononono
White Pine nononononono
Conifer Plantations nonononono-
Mixed Upland Hardwoods nononononono
Mixed Northern Hardwoods nononononono
Mixed Upland Conifer nononononono
Mixed Pine nononononono
Swamp Hardwoods nononononono
Balsam Poplar & Swamp Aspen & Swamp Birch nononononono
Bottomland Hardwoods nononononono
Tamarack nononononono
Northern White Cedar nononononono
Black Spruce nononononono
Mixed Lowland Hardwoods nononononono
Mixed Lowland Conifer nononononono
Non-ForestedFields/Pastures, Residential, Lake, Pond, River, Sewage Lagoons & Farm Ponds, Shorelines & Mudflats
Special FeaturesRiparian

view size class definitions

Literature:

Chu, P. C. 1991. Killdeer. Pages 206-207 In: R. Brewer, G. A. McPeek, and R. J. Adams, Jr. (eds.) The atlas of breeding birds of Michigan. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing. 594 pp.

The Killdeer is familiar in part because it uses open areas for both nesting and feeding. Residential areas, agricultural lands, old fields, and other disturbed habitats are favored if human activity is not too intrusive. Individuals often shift to damper, more marshy habitats after breeding.

Bunni identified six consistent features of nest sites. These are (1) sparse cover; (2) a raised area for the nest; (3) stones, wood chips, plant stems, and other nesting materials within about one meter of the nest site; (4) nearby large objects, like dead wood or mounds of earth, presumably for concealment if an incubating bird is disturbed; (5) shallow standing water close by; and (6) ground soft enough for a nest scrape.


DeGraaf, R. M. and D. D. Rudis. 1986. New England wildlife: habitat, natural history, and distribution. GTR NE-108. Broomall, PA:USDA, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 491 pp.

Habitat: Breeding: Heavily grazed meadows, edges of pasture ponds, dry uplands. Often close to human habitation such as on lawns, golf courses, cemeteries, unpaved parking lots and driveways, airports, cultivated fields, waste places. Wintering: Plowed or sparsely vegetated moist fields. Coastal flats and beaches, river and lake shores that are free of ice.

Special Habitat Requirements: Open fields or waste areas with closely cropped or sparse vegetation.


Kaufman, K. 1996. Lives of North American Birds. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, Massachusetts. 675 pp.

Like other members of the plover family, this species is often found at the water's edge, but it also lives in pastures and fields far from water. At times, it nests on gravel roofs or on lawns.

Habitat: Fields, airports, lawns, river banks, mudflats, shores. Often found on open ground, such as pastures, plowed fields, large lawns, even at a great distance from water. Most successful nesting areas; however, have some shallow water or other good feeding area for the chicks. Also commonly found around water, on mudflats, lake shores, coastal estuaries.

Diet: Mostly insects. Feeds on a wide variety of insects, including beetles, caterpillars, grasshoppers, fly larvae, many others; also eats spiders, earthworms, centipedes, crayfish, snails. Eats small amounts of seeds as well.

Nest: Site is on ground in open area with good visibility, as on bare soil, field of short grass, gravel road; sometimes on gravel roof. Nest is shallow scrape in soil or gravel, either unlined or lined with pebbles, grass twigs, bits of debris.