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Crab-plover

The Crab-plover (Dromas ardeola) is a distinctive bird belonging to its own family, Dromadidae, with uncertain relations within the Charadriiformes, displaying similarities to thick-knees, pratincoles, auks, and gulls. It is the sole member of its genus and notably uses the warmth of the ground to incubate its eggs—unusual for waders. Sporting a black and white plumage, a heavy, strong black bill suited for eating crabs, partially webbed toes, and long grey legs, it's an unmistakable sight. The sexes look similar though males have longer bills, while juveniles wear greyish black. Known for their noisy calls, crab-plovers fly in formation and are protected under the AEWA. Residing along Indian Ocean coasts and islands, they forage on crabs, often in large, social groups and exhibit crepuscular and nocturnal behavior, especially during breeding season. They breed from April to July in areas like the Arabian Sea, Persian Gulf, Red Sea, dispersing as far as Sri Lanka and Madagascar. Unique among waders, crab-plovers nest in burrows, laying one, occasionally two, large eggs in solar-heated sand, allowing parents to leave the nest for extensive periods. Chicks, unable to walk initially, receive prolonged parental care after hatching and even post-fledging.

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African & Green Broadbills
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Australasian Babblers
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Coursers, Pratincoles

Crab-plover

Cranes
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Honeyguides
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Hylocitrea
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Ifrit
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Magpie Goose
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Mottled Berryhunter
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Nuthatches
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Oystercatchers
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Penduline Tits
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Typical Broadbills
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Waxwings
Weavers, Widowbirds
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White-eyes
Woodpeckers
Woodswallows, Butcherbirds & Allies
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Jayshrike
A photo of a Crab-plover (Dromas ardeola)

Crab-plover

Dromas ardeola
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Species Categories

Accentors

African & Green Broadbills

Albatrosses

Alcippe Fulvettas

Anhingas, Darters

Asian Barbets

Auks

Austral Storm Petrels

Australasian Babblers

Australasian Robins

Australasian Warblers

Australasian Wrens

Australo-Papuan Bellbirds

Babblers, Scimitar Babblers

Barn Owls

Bee-eaters

Birds-of-paradise

Boatbills

Bristlehead

Bulbuls

Buntings

Bushtits

Bustards

Buttonquail

Caracaras, Falcons

Cassowaries, Emu

Cettia Bush Warblers & Allies

Chats, Old World Flycatchers

Cisticolas & Allies

Cockatoos

Cormorants, Shags

Coursers, Pratincoles

Crab-plover

Cranes

Crombecs, African Warblers

Crows, Jays

Cuckoos

Cuckooshrikes

Cupwings

Dippers

Drongos

Ducks, Geese, Swans

Elachura

Fairy Flycatchers

Fairy-bluebirds

Fantails

Figbirds, Orioles, Turnagra

Finches, Euphonias

Finfoots

Flamingos

Flowerpeckers

Flufftails

Frigatebirds

Frogmouths

Gannets, Boobies

Goldcrests, Kinglets

Grassbirds & Allies

Grebes

Ground Babblers

Gulls, Terns, Skimmers

Herons, Bitterns

Honeyeaters

Honeyguides

Hoopoes

Hornbills

Hylocitrea

Ibisbill

Ibises, Spoonbills

Ifrit

Indigobirds, Whydahs

Ioras

Jacanas

Jewel-babblers, Quail-thrushes

Kingfishers

Kites, Hawks, Eagles

Larks

Laughingthrushes & Allies

Leaf Warblers & Allies

Leafbirds

Longspurs, Snow Buntings

Magpie Goose

Megapodes

Melampittas

Monarchs

Mottled Berryhunter

Nightjars

Northern Storm Petrels

Nuthatches

Old World Parrots

Old World Sparrows, Snowfinches

Ospreys

Owls

Oystercatchers

Painted-snipes

Parrotbills & Allies

Pelicans

Penduline Tits

Petrels, Shearwaters, Diving Petrels

Pheasants & Allies

Pigeons, Doves

Pittas

Ploughbill

Plovers

Rail-babbler

Rails, Crakes & Coots

Reed Warblers & Allies

Rollers

Sandpipers, Snipes

Shrikes

Sittellas

Skuas

Starlings, Rhabdornis

Stilts, Avocets

Stone-curlews, Thick-knees

Storks

Sunbirds

Swallows, Martins

Swifts

Sylviid Babblers

Thrushes

Tits, Chickadees

Treecreepers

Treeswifts

Trogons

Tropicbirds

Typical Broadbills

Vangas & Allies

Vireos, Greenlets, Shrike-babblers

Wagtails, Pipits

Wallcreeper

Waxbills, Munias & Allies

Waxwings

Weavers, Widowbirds

Whipbirds

Whistlers & Allies

White-eyes

Woodpeckers

Woodswallows, Butcherbirds & Allies

Wrens

Jayshrike

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