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Piping Plover females are the first to leave the Great Lakes and head south, leaving dad to finish raising the chicks.
As U.S. butterfly populations face declines, the John Ball Zoo has launched a program to save these insects in a race against extinction.
Some of the hottest chicks on Montrose Beach are now named El, Bean and Ferris. Why it matters: The monikers for this third ...
The Great Lakes piping plover recovery effort has been ongoing since the mid-1980s when the population got as low as a dozen ...
It's a familiar plight. Endangered bird bounces back after dwindling to dangerously low numbers — here's what's happening first appeared on The Cool Down.
One of the oldest piping plovers at the park, "Gabby" now has raised 37 chicks to flight. She soon will return to Georgia for ...
Conservation officials confirmed this year is a record-breaking nesting season for the federally endangered shorebird.
Chicago’s lakefront is famously open and free. So why is a prime section of Montrose Beach roped off every summer? Because it’s for the birds. Literally. The piping plovers. WTTW News explains.
Piping plover moms typically lay one egg every other day until they complete a full clutch of four, according to the Great Lakes Piping Plover Recovery Effort.
On a humid July afternoon, two tiny Great Lakes piping plovers step cautiously from a breadbox-sized crate onto the sun-warmed sands of a quiet beach. Just a few feet away, a team of researchers ...
The Great Lakes Piping Plover Conservation Team says one of the birds they track has survived another year migrating between Michigan and Florida despite suffering a broken leg.