Family: Charadriidae (Plovers)
Authority: Pallas, 1776
Red List Category
Criteria: A2bce+4bce
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here for more information about the Red List categories and criteria
Justification of Red List categoryThis species is one of many shorebirds in the East Asian–Australasian Flyway that is in steep decline. It breeds only in Far Eastern Russia, before migrating south through East Asia to winter (mostly) in Australia. There are a large number of threats impacting this species across this flyway, especially on passage where land reclamation for urban development, and invasion by
Spartina cordgrass, has considerably reduced the area of suitable habitat available to it. On its breeding grounds, climate change may also be having an effect, but the impact of this threat on Siberian Sandplover
is poorly known. Data suggest that these threats have driven population declines of 50–62% over the past three generations (2010–2023). If threats are not ameliorated, and declines do not slow or cease, then this species is at a relatively high risk of becoming extinct in the near-future. Accordingly it is listed as Endangered.
Population size:
18000-50000 mature individuals
Population trend:
decreasing
Extent of occurrence (breeding/resident):
3,200,000 km
2
Country endemic:
yes