Pulling for plovers: Group heaves weeds from sandy habitat of endangered bird - Action News
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Manitoba

Pulling for plovers: Group heaves weeds from sandy habitat of endangered bird

A small group of bird-lovers is pulling for the return of an endangered bird that hasn't been nesting in the Riverton Sandy Bar area of Lake Winnipeg for years.

Volunteers remove invasive sweet clover by hand from Riverton Sandy Bar on Lake Winnipeg

Bird Studies Canada biologist Christian Artuso hauls a big hunk of sweet clover and weeds from the shore side at Riverton Sandy Bar on Lake Winnipeg. (Joanne Smith)

An uninvited visitorhas made astretch of Lake Winnipeg's shorelineundesirable forbirds, prompting agroup of volunteers totake mattersinto their own hands and gardening gloves.

More than a dozen peoplemet Fridayto pullinvasive plants from the beaches of Riverton Sandy Bar,an Important Bird Area andpeninsulalocated west ofHeclaIsland along the western shores ofLake Winnipeg.

Two per cent of North America's common tern population can be found nesting in the Riverton Sandy Bar area every summer. (Bill Perks)

Joanne Smith, the "eyes and ears for the birds" andso-called caretaker of theImportant Bird Area (IBA), said invasive plantssuch as sweet clovercontinue to sprout and spread along the sandy shores and need to be removed, as they occupy what would otherwise be piping plover habitat.

"I don't think weed pulling is a very exciting thing for most people,"Smith said."It is just like a carpet out there, but it's actually really easy to pull."

The stretch of beachand two sand islands inRivertonprovide nesting habitat to one per cent of the world's ring-billed gull population and two per cent of North America's common tern population.

A pair of piping plovers nested in Manitoba again this summer - the first known case in six years. (Christian Artuso/Bird Studies Canada)

The piping plover a small,round,sparrow-sized shorebird that is endangered in Canadaused to hunker down and breed onbeaches in the Rivertonarea everysummer.But there hasn't been any record of theshorebird on theRivertonSandy Barsince 2004.

Shorebirds like the plover often set up shop and lay eggsout in the open on the beach. But if there is too much activity in the area say, from boaters or people riding ATVs the birds take to the wing and may decide against returning to the area for another summer.

The Riverton Sandy Bar area is designated as a special conservation area, as shorebirds use its shores to nest every summer. (Joanne Smith)

Paired with artificially high water levels maintained on Lake Winnipeg, human disturbance on the beach has led to erosion and destruction of shoreline habitat.

"During years when the lake level is low, ATVs can actually drive out onto the sand bar. That's a bigthing that [Manitoba Sustainable Development]and the IBA are concerned about," Smith said.

Important Bird Area co-ordinator Tim Poole yanks out arms full of invasive vegetation. (Joanne Smith)

Disturbing the soil and sand has presented an opening for sweet clover to come in and colonize the beach, choking out open sandy surfaces that are ideal for certain shorebird species.

A 2001 plan laid out conservation goals for the area, stating "if project funding is limited, encroachment by woody vegetation should be considered the highest ranking threat to avian nesting habitat along the Sandy Bar."

That encroachment is what spurred the weed pull, which Smith hopes will become an annual tradition.

"It seemed like it was going to be quite an ordeal,"Smith said. "We thought thateven if it wasn't the best option, if it couldn't be totally removed, removal of as much of it as possible would be better than nothing."

Volunteers stand over several big bags full to the brim with invasive plant species, such as sweet clover, that they pulled from the ground Friday. (Joanne Smith)

Smith has neverlaid eyes on a piping plover herself and said it'shard to say whetherremoving the weeds willlure the bird back toSandy Bar.

Some are holding out hope it will be enough, asthe first pair of piping plovers to breed in Manitoba in six years was confirmed this past summerin another, undisclosed location in the province.

"It's been a long time since they nested there," Smith said."It can't hurt;it can only make the possibility greater if we make the habitat more inviting for the plover."

Fourteen volunteers pitched in at the event.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story wrongly stated that the last confirmed record of piping plovers at Riverton Sandy Bar was in 1991. In fact, Manitoba Sustainable Development confirms the endangered species was last seen in the area in 2004.
    Oct 03, 2016 5:30 PM CT