What is the float?

Flover is a type of wading coast in the Charadriidae family. About 40 species in this family are considered to be plovers and family representatives can be found around the world, along the banks of the oceans, lakes and other large water bodies. Unfortunately, several types of float are considered to be endangered or even endangered due to the pressure of the habitat that caused a decrease in their number. As a result, some parts of the coast in many areas of the world have been described as out of limits for people in the hope of encouraging a float population to revive. They have squats, rounded bodies with heavy breasts, short tails and small accounts and are extremely small. Ploovers also move very irregularly, usually socializing in large groups that swirl from place to place and look for food. Some people compare stains with chickens when birds hunt and eraratically when looking for sea invertebrates, insects and worms that make up most of their diet.

Plovers nest on the ground, usually digging shallow depression on the ground and lining them with available plant material, animal hair and other substances. Since they nest on the ground, their nests are endangered by heavy legs and other animals who can accidentally crush the eggs as they pass the coast. Plovers are also endangered by predators, such as dogs who can disrupt birds, attack parents or eat eggs.

The filter call is very distinctive, most of which produce a number of whistling sounds that can carry quite ways along the coast. Some floovers are known for being quite noisy, and in a large group there may be a flock of floats almost deafening. In areas with a large biological diversity, they are often seen in the middle of the flocks of other coasts, where they dress around the mastric search for drained food.

Some remarkable examples of floats include New Zealand Wrybill, the only bird in the world with a beak that is bent sideways, and Killdeer, Killdeer whoHe is known for his penetrating calls. Snowy Plover and Piping Flover are two types with well -advertised protection behind them; Nesting surfaces of snowfish are often found along the North American seas.

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