Join BirdNote tomorrow, November 30th!
Illustrator David Sibley and actor H. Jon Benjamin will face off in the bird illustration battle of the century during BirdNote's Year-end Celebration and Auction!
Nature educator Johanne Ryan shares her observations of Southern Lapwings, shorebirds that make their nests on the ground in open areas and vigorously defend them. If a potential predator approaches, the parent will sound a piercing alarm call. If that doesn’t work, the lapwing will charge the opponent, using a secret weapon – sharp, bony spurs on the bird’s “wrists.”
BirdNote®
Southern Lapwings Defend Their Nest
Written by Johanne Ryan
[Field soundscape from Trinidad]
Johanne Ryan: This is BirdNote. I’m Johanne Ryan, a nature educator in Trinidad and Tobago.
[Southern Lapwing call]
Day and night, I often hear the piercing cackles of Southern Lapwings right from my home. They are familiar sights in my neighborhood.
In a shallow depression on a grassy cricket field are three olive brown, mottled eggs. A Southern Lapwing mother carefully covers the clutch before leaving to look for food.
But this clutch of eggs needs more than just camouflage to evade predators like reptiles on the ground or hawks in the sky.
If an unfamiliar creature approaches, the Southern Lapwing parent, usually the male, sounds his alarm.
[Southern Lapwing call]
He then charges towards his opponent – wings open and head low, ready to peck with his sharp beak.
If that doesn’t work, the lapwing takes flight, where he becomes a feathered fighter jet swooping at the intruder. And the lapwing has a secret weapon: sharp, red, bony spurs that stick out from the birds’ ‘wrists’.
My heart jumped the first time I had to duck to avoid a lapwing’s flying attack. I thought I was a good distance away, but the bird thought otherwise.
This is why humans can never get too close to a Southern Lapwing’s nest. These ferocious defenders simply won’t have it.
###
Senior Producer: John Kessler
Producer: Mark Bramhill
Managing Editor: Jazzi Johnson
Managing Producer: Conor Gearin
Content Director: Jonese Franklin
Bird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. ML48706421 recorded by Tom Johnson, Southern Lapwing ML217029 recorded by Robert Bochenek, and Southern Lapwing ML189516 recorded by Matthew D. Medler.
BirdNote’s theme was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
© 2023 BirdNote August 2023
Narrator: Johanne Ryan
ID# SOLA-01-2023-08-23 SOLA-01
Reference
https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/soulap1/cur/introduction