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  • Great Lakes piping plover Imani stretches his wings after helping...

    Great Lakes piping plover Imani stretches his wings after helping to incubate an egg at Montrose Beach in Chicago on May 31, 2024. The Chicago Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at the Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

  • Great Lakes piping plover Imani incubates an egg, surrounded by...

    Great Lakes piping plover Imani incubates an egg, surrounded by a protective cage installed earlier this week, at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

  • Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a...

    Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a nest where she laid an egg at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

  • A bird watcher uses a scope to locate Great Lakes...

    A bird watcher uses a scope to locate Great Lakes piping plovers Searocket and Imani at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

  • Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a...

    Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a nest where she laid an egg at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

  • An endangered piping plover sits in a gravel parking lot...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    An endangered piping plover sits in a gravel parking lot across from the beach in Waukegan Municipal Beach on May 10, 2019, in Waukegan.

  • A newly-hatched piping plover chick stands next to one of...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A newly-hatched piping plover chick stands next to one of its parents at Montrose Beach on July 10, 2021.

  • Imani, background, watches a newly arrived piping plover walk along...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    Imani, background, watches a newly arrived piping plover walk along Montrose Beach on April 27, 2023. Imani is a male offspring of Monty and Rose.

  • A tattoo of Rose, an endangered Great Lakes piping plover,...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A tattoo of Rose, an endangered Great Lakes piping plover, is inked on the leg of Dori Levine, a volunteer for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, as she observes Rose and her mate, Monty, with their four recently hatched chicks at Montrose Beach on July 10, 2021.

  • Rose, right, leaves the nest as Monty takes takes over...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Rose, right, leaves the nest as Monty takes takes over duties at Montrose Beach on July 18, 2019.

  • Bird monitor Emma England, left, and Annette McClellan walk along...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Bird monitor Emma England, left, and Annette McClellan walk along the pier at Waukegan Municipal Beach on a foggy morning on May 29, 2019, in Waukegan.

  • Monty the piping plover walks the shoreline on April 21,...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Monty the piping plover walks the shoreline on April 21, 2022, after returning to Montrose Harbor.

  • Monty or Rose, an adult piping plover, sits with one...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Monty or Rose, an adult piping plover, sits with one of their chicks at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July 8, 2021. Monty and Rose have hatched their third round of chicks since first parenting at Montrose Beach in 2019.

  • Imani, a piping plover walks along Montrose Beach on April...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    Imani, a piping plover walks along Montrose Beach on April 27, 2023.

  • A piping plover offspring of Monty and Rose is seen...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover offspring of Monty and Rose is seen at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July 8, 2021.

  • An unbanded piping plover walks along Montrose Harbor on April...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    An unbanded piping plover walks along Montrose Harbor on April 27, 2023.

  • Young piping plovers at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Young piping plovers at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July 29, 2020.

  • An endangered piping plover roams around a gravel parking lot...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    An endangered piping plover roams around a gravel parking lot across from the beach in Waukegan Municipal Beach on May 10, 2019, in Waukegan.

  • Laura Mobley watches piping plovers on April 27, 2023, at...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    Laura Mobley watches piping plovers on April 27, 2023, at Montrose Beach.

  • Bird monitor Emma England, left, and Annette McClellan look for...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Bird monitor Emma England, left, and Annette McClellan look for birds on a foggy morning at Waukegan Municipal Beach on May 29, 2019, in Waukegan. A male piping plover had been spotted foraging for food in the early morning hours over the last several weeks.

  • People walk along a foggy lakefront June 19, 2019, at...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    People walk along a foggy lakefront June 19, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • A piping plover known as Rose is seen at Chicago's...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover known as Rose is seen at Chicago's Montrose Beach on April 26, 2021.

  • An adult piping plover wades at Montrose Beach in Chicago...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    An adult piping plover wades at Montrose Beach in Chicago on June 24, 2020.

  • Bystanders look for Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Bystanders look for Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes piping plovers that became the first pair to nest successfully in Chicago in decades, at Montrose Beach on April 26, 2021.

  • A piping plover sits on its nest after a protective...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover sits on its nest after a protective cage was installed by officials June 10, 2019, at Montrose Beach. The piping plovers can enter and leave the cage, but other wildlife or people can't interfere with their nest.

  • Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes piping plovers that...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes piping plovers that became the first pair to nest successfully in Chicago in decades, are seen at Montrose beach on April 26, 2021.

  • A piping plover who appears to be Monty is seen...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover who appears to be Monty is seen at Montrose beach on April 26, 2021.

  • A bird that matches leg bandings of Monty, one of...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    A bird that matches leg bandings of Monty, one of the endangered Great Lakes piping plovers that became the first pair to nest successfully in Chicago in decades, is seen at Montrose Beach on April 26, 2021.

  • A piping plover walks on the sand near the new...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover walks on the sand near the new nest Wednesday, June 19, 2019 at Montrose Beach.

  • Young piping plovers at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Young piping plovers at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July 29, 2020.

  • A piping plover named Rose appears at Montrose Beach in...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover named Rose appears at Montrose Beach in Chicago on April 26, 2021. Rose and her mate, Monty, first met on a Waukegan beach when they were only a few months old. They attempted to nest in Waukegan in 2018, without success, but in 2019, they ended up fledging two chicks on Montrose. And last summer, they fledged three.

  • Beachgoers enjoy themselves at Montrose Beach on June 8, 2019....

    Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune

    Beachgoers enjoy themselves at Montrose Beach on June 8, 2019. Some community groups do not want the summer music fest Mamby on the Beach to take place there, while the promotors are pushing back.

  • People watch a piping plover walk through the sand on...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    People watch a piping plover walk through the sand on April 21, 2022, at Montrose Harbor.

  • A piping plover chick walks at Montrose Beach in Chicago...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover chick walks at Montrose Beach in Chicago on June 24, 2020.

  • Birders look for Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Birders look for Monty and Rose, the endangered Great Lakes piping plovers that became the first pair to nest successfully in Chicago in decades, at Montrose Beach on April 26, 2021.

  • Monty stands by a rock at Montrose Beach on July...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Monty stands by a rock at Montrose Beach on July 18, 2019.

  • An adult piping plover flies at Montrose Beach on June...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    An adult piping plover flies at Montrose Beach on June 24, 2020.

  • Beachgoers enjoy themselves at Montrose Beach on June 8, 2019....

    Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune

    Beachgoers enjoy themselves at Montrose Beach on June 8, 2019. Some community groups do not want the summer music fest Mamby on the Beach to take place, while the promotors are pushing back.

  • A newly hatched piping plover chick stands alone at Montrose...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A newly hatched piping plover chick stands alone at Montrose Beach on July 10, 2021, in Chicago. Three of its older siblings were hatched earlier in the week, but the chick was brought to Lincoln Park Zoo as an egg, where it hatched overnight.

  • A piping plover walks on the sand near the new...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover walks on the sand near the new nest June 19, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • A piping plover forages along the water June 10, 2019,...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover forages along the water June 10, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • A piping plover cleans itself while foraging along the water...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover cleans itself while foraging along the water June 10, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • Birders watch the piping plovers on April 21, 2022, at...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Birders watch the piping plovers on April 21, 2022, at Montrose Harbor.

  • A pair of piping plovers change places incubating a nest...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A pair of piping plovers change places incubating a nest of three eggs June 10, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • A piping plover forages along the water June 10, 2019,...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover forages along the water June 10, 2019, at Montrose Beach.

  • A piping plover chick checks out its surroundings at Montrose...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A piping plover chick checks out its surroundings at Montrose Beach in Chicago on June 24, 2020.

  • An adult piping plover huddles with two of its chicks...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    An adult piping plover huddles with two of its chicks at Montrose Beach in Chicago on July 8, 2021.

  • Two piping plover chicks, left, rush to an adult piping...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Two piping plover chicks, left, rush to an adult piping plover as a heavy rain comes down at Montrose Beach in Chicago on June 24, 2020.

  • Imani the piping plover runs along Montrose Beach on April...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    Imani the piping plover runs along Montrose Beach on April 26, 2023. Imani is the son of the two famous piping plovers, Monty and Rose, and was spotted for the first time this season at the beach the day before.

  • Imani the piping plover walks along the Montrose Beach on...

    Shanna Madison / Chicago Tribune

    Imani the piping plover walks along the Montrose Beach on April 26, 2023.

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Captive-reared piping plovers are making history as they guard two separate nests with eggs in Waukegan and Chicago.

Three plover eggs were documented Saturday in Waukegan, and 30 miles down the Lake Michigan shoreline, another egg was confirmed at Montrose Beach.

“This is an historic event for the Great Lakes Piping Plover Project,” said Brad Semel, endangered species recovery specialist for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.

Three of the four parents-to-be, Blaze, Pepper and Searocket, hatched in a captive-rearing facility in Michigan last summer. They were released as chicks near Montrose Beach and Illinois Beach State Park in Zion last July, and have returned from their southerly wintering locations to start families.

The fourth plover is Imani, born in the wild at Montrose Beach to Monty and Rose, the famous plover pair that first captured Chicago’s attention in 2019.

Captive-reared plovers have never laid eggs in Illinois before, only in Michigan, Semel said.

If all goes well, in another month, the new parents will be doting on up to four hatchlings at each nest, he said.

The three captive-reared plovers began as eggs laid on a New York beach in the spring of 2023. When a hawk killed one of their incubating parents, the eggs were whisked away to a Michigan facility where they would have a better chance to survive. About a month after they hatched, Semel picked them up and drove them in a cat carrier to Illinois to release them.

“It’s been a very long time since piping plovers were nesting in two different locations along the lakeshore in Illinois,” Semel said.

Volunteer monitors at both locations are overjoyed and cautious as they work to educate people about the need to protect the rare birds and the shoreline ecosystem in which they live.

Piping plovers in Chicago: How the ‘love story’ between Monty and Rose unfolded at Montrose Beach

Carolyn Lueck, a volunteer plover monitor with the Lake County Audubon Society’s Sharing Our Shore-Waukegan program has been visiting Blaze and Pepper almost daily since the plovers returned from two different wintering homes within a day of each other in May.

“By Saturday, we had three eggs and were anticipating a fourth,” said Lueck, a former Lake Forest and Chicago resident who now lives in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin. If the captive-reared plovers can raise wild piping plovers, that will show the “great experiment,” to save the endangered shorebird species can be successful, she said.

“Blaze and Pepper have been very diligent,” Lueck said. “They never leave that nest unattended. They’re protecting it from the grackles and other threats.”

Great Lakes piping plover Imani incubates an egg, surrounded by a protective cage installed earlier this week, at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
Great Lakes piping plover Imani incubates an egg, surrounded by a newly installed protective cage in Chicago at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024. The Chicago Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at the Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

However, volunteer monitors acting as plover protectors had to intervene recently when a grackle, a type of blackbird that eats crops and garbage and also raids bird nests, got inside the cage.

“On Saturday, Pepper was on the nest, and he got up a few times to get a couple of bugs,” Lueck said. “Blaze was out foraging for a very long time. She has to have been using lots of energy to lay her eggs.”

Piping plovers typically lay one egg every other day, for a total of four. After that, they incubate the eggs and the young hatch simultaneously about a month later.

On Montrose Beach, Tamima Itani, lead volunteer and interagency coordinator for the Chicago Piping Plovers monitors, said she marvels that Searocket, at only 11 months old, was able to return to where she was released, mate and lay an egg.

“I also celebrate the fact that Imani’s need for a mate is now fulfilled after two seasons without one,” Itani said.

Imani’s parents, Monty and Rose, attempted to nest in Waukegan in 2018 and then successfully raised young at Montrose Beach in 2019, 2020 and 2021.

Monty died in 2022 waiting at Montrose for Rose to return.

She never did, but their son Imani has returned to his birthplace the past three years hoping to find a mate. When Searocket arrived this spring, Imani courted her and they mated. Pepper is Monty’s great-nephew.

“As monitors, we have such a feeling of responsibility because so many people, organizations and partners are working to bring this species back from the brink,” Lueck said.

With help from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a cage has been installed around the Waukegan and Chicago nests.

“The cage allows plovers to easily come and go from their nest, but it restricts potential predators like foxes and raccoons,” Semel said. “One critical part is that the birds accept the cage. After placing the cage (in Waukegan), we hurried away and watched their behavior.”

In a little over a minute, the pair returned to the eggs, he said. “I was very relieved to note that both birds accepted the cage,” Semel said.

In addition, surveillance cameras have been placed at Montrose and Waukegan so Semel and others can monitor the plovers’ whereabouts and any potential for disturbance around the clock.

Approximately 500 to 800 piping plover pairs once nested annually throughout the Great Lakes, but by the 1980s that number had declined to about a dozen pairs, resulting in the bird being put on the federal endangered species list.

Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a nest where she laid an egg at Montrose Beach on May 31, 2024, in Chicago. The Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
Great Lakes piping plover Searocket looks for food near a nest where she laid an egg at Montrose Beach in Chicago on May 31, 2024. The Chicago Park District announced the presence of a new egg on the protected area at the Montrose Beach Dunes. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

In 1876, Illinois ornithologist E. W. Nelson wrote that the piping plover was “a very common summer resident along Illinois’ lakeshore.” He noted that 30 pairs were breeding along the beach in Waukegan within a space of 2 miles, according to H. David Bohlen, author of “Birds of Illinois.”

Nelson also mentioned numerous breeding plovers along the Lake Michigan shoreline in the late 1800s near Lake Calumet.

A dramatic population decline occurred in the 1940s in Illinois, according to Bohlen, who cited recreational and industrial buildup in Zion, Waukegan and the Calumet region as reasons why the plovers did not return to nest.

For the past four decades, captive-rearing programs, monitoring and habitat restoration have helped the species throughout the Great Lakes.

Last year, a record 80 pairs of piping plovers were documented in the Great Lakes region, according to Stephanie Cabal Schubel, a team member at Great Lakes Piping Plover Conservation.

“The work of citizens and officials to clean sites and monitor piping plovers shows the resilience of nature,” Semel said.

Lueck said that when she started monitoring the plovers she didn’t realize how important the Lake Michigan shoreline was to a variety of migratory species.

Near where the plovers nest, she said she’s seen shorebird species including ruddy turnstones and sanderlings stopping in spring. “They are so dependent on our shores for food so they can make it to their northern breeding grounds,” Lueck said.

Montrose Beach is also a safe respite for migratory birds, with roughly 12 acres set aside specifically for nesting plovers, according to Itani, of the Chicago Piping Plovers.

The piping plovers have, in effect, created a protected part of the beaches in Chicago and Waukegan that benefits many other animals and plants, according to Itani, Lueck and Semel.

“It’s because of the piping plovers that people are recognizing the ecological value of the lakeshore,” Semel said.