DEM says piping
plover chicks old enough to handle it
Look both ways before you cross the beach |
PROVIDENCE [DEM news release] - The Department of Environmental Management announces that the East
Beach/Ninigret Conservation Area Sand Trail will be reopened to vehicle traffic
beginning at 9 a.m. Friday, July 26.
The reopening of the trail will provide
access to the campground and back track trail.
The sand trail has been restricted to pedestrian traffic only since July 1 in order to provide protection for endangered piping plover chicks, which have been feeding and taking refuge along the sand trail.
The sand trail has been restricted to pedestrian traffic only since July 1 in order to provide protection for endangered piping plover chicks, which have been feeding and taking refuge along the sand trail.
The piping plover is a small shorebird that is listed as threatened on both
Federal and State endangered species lists.
Hurricane Sandy changed the face of the Rhode
Island coastline and beaches for the public as well as for piping plovers. On
East Beach there are many over-wash areas that provide access for young birds
such as the piping plover chicks.
US Fish
and Wildlife Service (USFWS) staff and volunteers have been monitoring the
plover nests and broods on a daily basis. Now that the young piping plover
chicks are able to fly, the sand trail is being reopened and the protective
roping is being removed.
Throughout
this summer and into the fall DEM, USFWS and the Coastal Resources Management
Council will work together to plan restoration of these dunes in order to
restore vegetation between the beach and the sand trail. Restoration of the
dunes is expected to reduce the likelihood of plovers utilizing the sand trail.