# Migration of Crab Plovers Dromas ardeola Wintering at Barr Al Hikman, Oman

**Authors:** Roeland A. Bom, Andy Y. Kwarteng, Jan A. van Gils

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71917 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-08-05

## TL;DR

This study tracks crab plovers from Oman to their breeding sites, revealing their migration routes and behaviors across deserts and mountains.

## Contribution

First detailed documentation of crab plover migration routes and behaviors between wintering and breeding grounds.

## Key findings

- Spring migration involves a northward route over deserts and mountains followed by coastal stops in the Arabian/Persian Gulf.
- Autumn migration includes a coastal return route, with some birds crossing the Rub Al Khali desert in a single night.
- Migratory flights mostly occur at night and low altitudes, with some reaching up to 1748 meters above sea level.

## Abstract

Crab plovers 
Dromas ardeola
 are shorebirds endemic to the coasts of the Indo‐West Pacific biogeographical area. Very little is known about the migration of this enigmatic bird. Here, we studied the migratory itineraries of six crab plovers tracked between their wintering grounds in Barr Al Hikman, Oman, and their breeding grounds on islands in the north‐west of the Arabian/Persian Gulf in Iran and Kuwait. During spring migration, all tagged birds followed a similar route. On the first leg, birds flew north over desert and mountain areas. After reaching the Arabian/Persian Gulf, they followed the northern coastline, where most birds had several stops. Birds initiated spring migratory flight between February 28 and May 7, and it took 3–24 days to travel from the non‐breeding to the breeding areas. The birds spent between 96 and 174 days at the breeding colonies. Autumn migratory flights were mostly along the eastern coast of the Arabian/Persian Gulf. Four birds followed a coastal route back to Barr Al Hikman, similar to spring migration. Two birds followed a southerly route and short‐cut the last stretch of 500 km by crossing the Empty Quarter (Rub Al Khali) desert region. Autumn migratory flights occurred between July 19 and October 24, lasting 3–91 days. Most migratory flights occurred predominantly between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m. and were almost always less than 25 m altitude above the Earth's surface. The maximum height of 1748 m above sea level was measured above the Oman Mountains. Crab plovers were able to cross potential barriers (i.e., the two desert areas and a mountain range) within a single night. We discuss our results with respect to the migratory connectivity known for this species.

Crab plovers 
Dromas ardeola
 are unique shorebirds endemic to the Indo‐West Pacific, yet their migratory patterns remain poorly understood. This study provides the first detailed insights into the migratory itineraries of crab plovers between their wintering grounds in Oman and breeding sites in Iran and Kuwait. Our findings reveal consistent spring and autumn migration routes, including crossings over deserts and mountains, as well as a large number of stopping sites along the way.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Dromas ardeola (taxon 458190)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Dromas ardeola (species) [taxon 458190]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12325891/full.md

## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12325891/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12325891