I recently attended the national shorebird council meeting and Waterbird
Society meeting at Cape May, New Jersey.  Canadian and American shorebird
biologists and land managers attended the meeting.  Joe Canada's son-in-law
Canada Dry also graced us with his presence.  Some findings applicable to
Midwestern shorebirders are:

Piping Plover conservation in the Great Lakes is finally paying off as
several pairs bred in northern Wisconsin (Apostle Islands) and in Ontario
and a pair bred in northern Illinois.  Red flags though continue for this
population (70+ pairs) with birds lost to botulism and some killed by
Merlins which are moving south as a breeding bird in the Sleeping Bear
Dunes region of Michigan.  Some avian and mammalian predators along the
Atlantic coast now are keying in on the cages used to protect the nesting
plovers, causing some rethinking on how to avoid attracting predators.
Several U of MN folks (current and former students and faculty) are leading
the effort in understanding this species in the Northern Great Plains and
Great Lakes.

Several papers highlighted Semipalmated Sandpipers (SESA) which have
severely decreased in the Bay of Fundy staging area (likely due to a dike
across the upper bay that destroyed tidal flow and their chief food source)
and northern South American wintering areas with heavy hunting pressure in
Guyana and Surinam where the local version of "birding" is to go out with
long wires on Sunday and whip them up and down into a flock of shorebirds,
killing many in the process.  This is not done by impoverished folks for
subsistence but by teenagers and families that often arrive at the site in
rather well-off SUVs, making a day of it at the beach (mudflat).  Several
hundred thousand shorebirds may be harvested in this manner.  Aerial
surveys conducted in Feb, 1982 revealed 1,957,163 shorebirds in coastal
northern South America and only 403,959 in Dec, 2008 over the same area.
Eastern arctic Semi Sands are longer billed than western arctic birds,
sunstantially so in many cases and these are the ones showing the greatest
population decline.  Intense surveys of western arctic Semi Sands
(short-billed birds) showed steady or increasing populations.  Most
Midwestern migrant SESA are of the short-billed populations with
long-billed birds primarily migrating south along the Atlantic coasts.

Several Marbled Godwits (MAGO) that breed on Akimiski Island, James Bay
were fitted with satellite collars and to the surprise of everyone headed
southwest (some over Duluth!) and ended up wintering on the Sea of Cortez
in Sonora or Baja California, Mexico.  MAGOs were also banded last winter
in Georgia and most of them flew to the northern Great Plains.  I don't
believe those results have been published yet so I'll wait on reporting the
details.

Researchers at the The Center for Conservation Biology (Virginia) have been
banding whimbrels at Virginia coastal staging areas.  Many of these birds
were recorded flying by Toronto in late May with several flying to breeding
areas in the western Hudson Bay lowlands and a couple continuing on NW to
the MacKenzie delta.  Give pause for reflection on these superb flyers when
you see one on the rocks of  Grand Marais next May.  Several birds returned
back to Virginia in the fall, then on to Antilles and northern South
America for wintering.

There was also discussion on the effects of climate change upon shorebirds.
Many breeding birds in the vicinity of Hudson Bay were thought to have
failed due to the cold early summer.  No Little Gulls at all were known to
have fledged near Churchill.  Productivity in other parts of Alaska and the
western Arctic was thought to be normal.  Some folks noted increased shrub
production and areal coverage in the Arctic which might be affecting tundra
species like American Golden-plover.

******************************************************************
Robert P. Russell, USFWS
Ft. Snelling. MN
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