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A Rare Look at Oystercatcher Nests

American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatchers usually lay three eggs.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatchers usually lay three eggs.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Eggs are incubated for about four weeks; both parents may incubate the eggs and brood the young.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Eggs are incubated for about four weeks; both parents may incubate the eggs and brood the young.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
A brand new nest. While American oysercatchers usually lay three eggs, they lay them every couple of days.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
A brand new nest. While American oysercatchers usually lay three eggs, they lay them every couple of days.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Oystercatchers teach their young how to forage for food. They eat bivalve mollusks.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Oystercatchers teach their young how to forage for food. They eat bivalve mollusks.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher
A nervous adult stays close by.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher
A nervous adult stays close by.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Oystercatchers nest in shallow scrapes on the sand.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
Oystercatchers nest in shallow scrapes on the sand.
Jane McTeigue
American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatcher nest
American oystercatcher
American oystercatcher nest

It is the nesting season for American oystercatchers, the harlequin-colored shorebirds with large reddish-orange bills.

Like piping plovers, the migratory birds return to the Vineyard in the late spring and nest in coastal areas. As the name suggests, the birds eat bivalve mollusks.

Ten years ago, surveys showed the American oystercatcher population was in decline. A coalition was formed to protect the birds, and the population has rebounded; an aerial survey in 2013 found 11,200 birds. In Massachusetts, they are a species of concern.

Here is a rare closer look at four American oystercatcher nests on the South Shore last week. Shorebird nesting areas are restricted. The photographer was accompanied by a shorebird monitor.

 

 



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