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Piping Plover Lokta Card

$5.00$8.00

  • Our images are set in a frame on this beautiful, handmade paper from the Nepalese Lokta shrub.
  • This tree-free paper is both environmentally friendly and sustainably harvested.
  • Each card comes with an envelope and is packaged individually in 100% biodegradable cellophane sleeve.
  • Cards are blank on the inside for your message.
  • Back of card has educational story, shown below in description.

Back of Card DESCRIPTION

The piping plover is a small shorebird named for its mellow, melodious whistle, a clear peep,peep, peep peep-lo. Compactly built with a short bill, large eyes and rounded head, this sand-colored plover has bright orange legs and a single black breast band.

Once fairly common along Atlantic coast beaches, Great Lakes beaches and interior river sandbars, the piping plover is now threatened or endangered throughout its entire range where breeding habitat has been replaced with shoreline development and recreation.

Piping plovers depend on camouflage for survival. Virtually invisible in their habitat, they play a game of “now you see me now you don’t.” The adult is hard to spot until it moves, and the nest, a slight hollow in the sand lined with pebbles and bits of broken shell, is even more difficult to see. Their eggs buff color and speckled pattern match the sand exactly.

Many agencies are running public information campaigns to raise awareness about this bird’s endangered status. We need to pay attention and respect areas where plovers are nesting. Please support set-aside areas and learn to share the beach with this sweet shorebird. We don’t want to look away and lose sight of them forever.

artwork by John Sill © 2003
text by Kara Jean Hagedorn