American Golden-Plover
American Golden-Plover has surged: up 114% on the route-weighted index since 1986.
About the American Golden-Plover
The American Golden-Plover (Pluvialis dominica) is a North American member of the Plovers & Lapwings (Charadriidae). In this analysis it is grouped with the shorebirds.
- Size
- 6–12 in long (15–30 cm) — a small to medium shorebird (typical for the family)
- Habitat
- Shorelines, mudflats, beaches, flooded fields and wet meadows.
- Diet
- Invertebrates probed or picked from mud, sand and shallow water.
- Range
- Recorded on 22 Breeding Bird Survey routes across 1 state, most concentrated in the BCR 2.
- Family
- Charadriidae · Shorebirds
Notable American Golden-Plover TrendsNotable signalsLong-arc shifts the engine flags automatically — sustained declines or increases large enough to stand out from year-to-year noise.Full methodology →
No notable trend signals for American Golden-Plover. See the full index history below.
American Golden-Plover Population Forecast
If the recent trend holds, American Golden-Plover is projected to stay roughly flat through 2029, near 0.01 (95% range 0.00–0.01). A 5-year backtest shows a typical error of ±160.6%, with 60% of held-out values landing inside the 95% band.
Where the American Golden-Plover Is Detected
BBS routes recording American Golden-Plover, sized by most recent count.
American Golden-Plover Population Trend by State
American Golden-Plover Population Trend by Region
Bird Conservation Regions are the ecological unit for trends.
American Golden-Plover Conservation Status
Our route-weighted index shows it up about 114% since 1986. Many shorebirds have declined steeply, reflecting pressure on the coastal and wetland stopovers they depend on.
Source: USGS North American Breeding Bird Survey, retrieved 2026-05-22. Trend is a route-weighted relative-abundance index, not an absolute population.