The bird family Charadriidae includes the plovers, dotterels, and lapwings. The family contains 69 species that are divided into 12 genera.
Charadriidae is a family of small to medium-sized birds that includes plovers, dotterels, and lapwings, with 69 species spread across 12 different groups. These birds are found around the world and are known for their presence in open habitats like beaches, grasslands, and wetlands where they hunt for insects and small invertebrates.
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The bird family Charadriidae includes the plovers, dotterels, and lapwings. The family contains 69 species that are divided into 12 genera.
== Taxonomy == The family Charadriidae was introduced (as Charadriadæ) by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum published in 1820. Most members of the family are known as plovers, lapwings or dotterels. These were rather vague terms which were not applied with any great consistency in the past. In general, larger, broader-winged species have often been called lapwings, and the smaller, narrower-winged species plovers or dotterels. Until recently, it was thought these formed two major clear taxonomic sub-groups, with lapwings belong to the subfamily Vanellinae, and all but one of the plovers and dotterels to Charadriinae; the last one placed in a small third subfamily Pluvianellinae containing only the Magellanic plover. Modern genetic evidence has however shown that this arrangement was polyphyletic, with in particular, many species traditionally placed in the plover genus Charadrius proving more closely related to the lapwings than they were to the type species of that genus, Charadrius hiaticula; as a result, those species have now been split out into the genus Anarhynchus (syn. Ochthodromus). The third former 'subfamily' proved so completely unrelated to the other plovers that it has been removed from the Charadriidae altogether and given its own monotypic family Pluvianellidae, its closest relatives being the strikingly different sheathbills.
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