Charadriidae |
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Scientific classification |
Kingdom: |
Animalia
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Phylum: |
Chordata
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Class: |
Aves
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Order: |
Charadriiformes
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Family: |
Charadriidae
Vigors, 1825 |
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Genera |
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Vanellinae
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Charadriinae
- Pluvialis
Charadrius
Thinornis
Elseyornis
Peltohyas
Anarhynchus
Phegornis
Oreopholus
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The bird family Charadriidae includes the
plovers, dotterels, and lapwings, about 64 to 66
species in all. They are small to medium-sized
birds with compact bodies, short, thick necks and long,
usually pointed, wings.
They are distributed through open country worldwide,
mostly in habitats near water, although there are some
exceptions: the
Inland Dotterel, for example, prefers stony ground in
the deserts of central and western Australia.
They hunt by sight, rather than by feel as longer-billed
waders like
snipe do. Foods eaten include insects, worms or other
invetebrates depending on habitat, and are usually obtained
by a run-and-pause technique, rather than the steady probing
of some other wader groups.
Most members of the family are known as plovers,
lapwings or dotterels. These were rather vague
terms which were not applied with any great consistency in
the past. In general, larger species have often been called
lapwings, smaller species plovers or
dotterels and there are in fact two clear taxonomic
sub-groups: most lapwings belong to the subfamily
Vanellinae, most plovers and dotterels to Charadriinae.
The trend in recent years has been to rationalise the
common names of the Charadriidae. For example, the large and
very common Australian bird traditionally known as the
‘Spur-winged Plover’, is now the Masked Lapwing; the former
‘Solitary Plover’ is now the Solitary Lapwing.
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