
Learn the signs of bird disturbance and what you can do to help beach-nesting birds.
In spring and summer, our beaches and islands become a nursery for federally and state-protected birds like the Piping Plover, Least Tern, and American Oystercatcher.
They lay well-camouflaged eggs directly on the ground, usually on sand or shells. The beach is their only home, and individual birds often return to the same place year after year to raise their young.
These birds rely on us to share the shore, because our beach season is their nesting season.
Our coastal stewardship work, known on Long Island as the "Be a Good Egg" program, reduces threats to nesting shorebirds through monitoring and surveying, and hands-on stewardship鈥攅recting fencing around nesting areas, installing predator exclosures around nests, and educating beachgoers with handouts and signage.
When a person or dog walks through a nesting area, the adults run or fly off in fear. During the nesting season, this exposes the eggs or chicks to fatally high temperatures and drastically increases the risk of predation. Off-leash dogs and cats can kill or injure birds, especially flightless chicks. Trash on the beach can entangle birds, be mistaken for food and ingested, and can attract predators.
You can help give birds the space they need to safely rest, nest, feed, and raise their young by taking the pledge to "Be a Good Egg" - .
Four Harbors 约炮视频 Society
Great South Bay 约炮视频 Society
Huntington Oyster Bay 约炮视频 Society
North Fork 约炮视频 Society
North Shore 约炮视频 Society
South Shore 约炮视频 Society
Group for the East End
Thanks also to the Town of Hempstead, the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, the Town of Oyster Bay, and the Town of Brookhaven for bringing this program to a variety of Long Island beaches.
Partial program support comes from The Robert F. Schumann Foundation, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation鈥檚 Long Island Sound Futures Fund, and CSX.
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Coast Program Manager, Theodore Roosevelt Sanctuary and 约炮视频 Center
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