Plover Primetime: Issue #8 Lorc and Sasquatch
Welcome to the eighth installment in our new interpretive series 鈥� Plover Primetime!

Everyone鈥檚 favorite greenskin pencil pusher has returned from his ranging once again to raise more j鈥檚ons and j鈥檇aughters at Fowler Beach.  Lorc was banded at Fowler in 2023 as an adult and has come back every season since.  Because he always comes back. 

Like many plovers, Lorc is a pretty ferocious parent and will do anything to protect his nest.  When predators (or our biologists) show up, plovers start alarm-calling to let other plovers in the area know that there are intruders.  If the intruders get too close, the parent will put on the performance of a lifetime.  They鈥檒l throw themselves to the sand, start flopping around like they have a broken wing, and make the most pitiful sounds a plover can muster.  If the plover rolls well on their performance check, the predator will believe they鈥檙e an easy meal and they can lead it away from the nest. 

Erin Betancourt/USFWS

This behavior, appropriately called a 鈥渂roken-wing act鈥� or 鈥渨ing feigning,鈥� can also be seen in other shorebirds such as killdeer and American oystercatchers.  Our biologists prefer it to the least tern鈥檚 more egregious method of predator deterrence.  Pee-yew! 

Lorc鈥檚 mate for this year has been a little harder to pin down.  Keep your eyes peeled and your cameras ready.  She鈥檚 proving to be rather elusive.  So far, this is all the evidence that we鈥檝e been able to gather of her existence:

Just kidding.  Sasquatch is plenty easy to find if you know where to look 鈥� despite her quiet nature.  She also was banded in 2023 as an adult and neither she nor Lorc were able to fledge a single chick with their respective partners that year.  It was a bit of a rough time for our south Fowler nesting pairs and their chicks seemed to take the brunt of the predation.  In 2024, Lorc and Sasquatch were together for the first time (that we know of), and they fledged 3 chicks together!  Cross your fingers for a stellar repeat performance. 

From March 1 to September 30, Fowler Beach is closed to public access to prevent disturbance to nesting birds and their young as well as migrating shorebirds like the red knot.  Please obey all posted signage and avoid entering areas that are marked as closed so that vulnerable wildlife, plants, and their habitats can thrive! 

All media captured by our staff during routine nest monitoring surveys. 
Original character art of Lorc Irontusk by Shaun Makes @