SMALL, UNOBTRUSIVE AND easily forgotten, the cute and pretty Ringed Plover is one of our most looked-over, easily forgotten birds. This is partly because it is not uncommon, so quickly acknowledged, noted and passed over in search of something scarcer. It is familiar as a passage and wintering bird, where it is often a ‘stock bird’, like the plover equivalent of a Dunlin. But it is also one of our most widespread coastal breeding waders, with about 5,500 breeding pairs. Some breed inland, but most nest on beaches.
When disturbed near the nest site, they are famed for feigning a broken wing to (mis)lead away potential predators. The stretched out wing shows a white wing bar (unlike the similar Little Ringed Plover). Ringed Plovers also have orange legs and base…