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Shore Birds Gallery


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Shore Birds
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If you have bird pictures that you would like to donate please
attach them to an email and send them to chaplintourism@sasktel.nel

When you see the large, white salt deposits near the Trans Canada Highway between Moose Jaw and Swift Current, you're entering the Chaplin Lake area, reverted for it's shorebirds. The Chaplin Lake area was designated a Western Hemispheric Shorebird Reserve Network site in May of 1997 with hemispheric importance. This is the highest designation possible and there is only one other site in Canada with this designation, the Bay of Fundy.
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American Golden Plover
Avocet
Baird's Sandpiper
Black Bellied Plover
American Golden Plover
American Avocet
Baird's Sandpiper
Black-bellied Plover
Black Necked Stilt
Buff Breasted Sandpiper
Common Snipe
Dunlin
Black-necked Stilt
Buff-breasted Sandpiper
Common Snipe
Dunlin
Hudsonian Godwit
Killdeer
Least Sandpiper
Lesser Yellowlegs
Hudsonian
Godwit
Killdeer
Least
Sandpiper
Lesser
Yellowlegs
Long Billed Curlew
Long Billed Dowitcher
Marbled Godwit
Mountain Plover
Long-billed
Curlew
Long-billed
Dowitcher
Marbled
Godwit
Mountain
Plover
Red Necked Phalarope
Red Knot
Piping Plover
Pectoral Sandpiper
Red-necked
Phalarope
Red Knot
Piping
Plover
Pectoral
Sandpiper
Willet
Ruddy Turnstone
Sanderlings
Whimbrel2
Willet
Ruddy
Turnstone
Sanderlings
Whimbrel
Short Billed Dowitcher
Snowy Plover
Solitary Sandpiper
Spotted Sandpiper
Short-billed
Dowitcher
Snowy Plover
Solitary
Sandpiper
Spotted
Sandpiper
Stilt Sandpiper
Upland Sandpiper
Western Sandpiper
Wilsons Phalarope
Stilt
Sandpiper
Upland
Sandpiper
Western
Sandpiper
Wilson's
Phalarope
Semipalmated Plover
White Rumped Sandpiper
Greater Yellowlegs
(No
Picture)
Semipalmated
Plover
White-rumped Sandpiper
Greater
Yellowlegs
Semipalmated Sandpiper

Chaplin Lake encompasses nearly 20 square miles (45,000 acres) and is the second largest saline water body in Canada. Shorebird surveys conducted by the Saskatchewan Wetlands Conservation Corporation and Environment Canada's Canadian Wildlife Service revealed that over 30 species, with a peak count of 67,000 birds in a day using the lake.

Counts of over 50,000 Sanderlings, or about 25-50% of their hemispheric population, have been counted in a single day in and around Chaplin Lake. This area is also one of the top four breeding areas in Saskatchewan for the Piping Plover, an endangered species whose principal breeding area is in Saskatchewan.

The Chaplin area fulfills the needs of many North American shorebirds. The area is a bounty of delight for the birds as they banquet on shore flies, brine shrimp, midge larval, and seeds from the salty shores and shallow waters. They intermingle their eating with rest, made easier by the scarcity of predators.The majority of birds that stop in Chaplin stop only briefly before continuing to their nesting grounds in the Arctic. This stop of just a few weeks is very necessary for the birds. They can double their weight during this time. In a pattern repeated for thousands of years, shorebirds link their winter stations in South America with the spring and summer nesting in Canada's prairies and high Arctic. During their passage with some birds flying more than 70 hours and over 5000 kms(3100 miles) between stops, it is critical their needs be met.




 
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Updated February, 2010

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