Hit the Beach With A Shorebird Biologist

Shelby Casas braves sun, bugs, and storms to protect endangered birds.
Shelby Casas and three shorebird field technicians walk towards the beach carrying a roll of wire fencing and other tools.
Shelby Casas (far right), shorebird biologist with 勛圖窪蹋 New York, heads to the beach with seasonal shorebird field technicians to exclose a Piping Plover nest to keep predators out. Photo: Luke Franke/勛圖窪蹋

The job of protecting vulnerable beach birds starts early. By 7 A.M. one morning in late April, Shelby Casas is almost out the door. The shorebird biologist with 勛圖窪蹋 New York checks the weather to confirm no dangerous storms are forecast; she also looked at it before bed last night. I check the weather a lot, she says, laughing. Her bag is packed with the essentialsbug spray, sunscreen, and a field note簫bookand she tosses in fresh fruit and water bottles. After feeding her pets, Casas grabs her favorite car breakfast (granola bar and thermos of coffee) and climbs into her Subaru Outback. She may spend hours driving between sites all day. On long trips, she often listens to audiobooksnext on her list is Margaret Atwoods Oryx and Crake. This morning shes heading to a private beach close to her apartment, so music will do.

At around 8:30 A.M. Casas parks near Long Islands Half Moon Beach, one of eight beachfront nesting sites she and two techni簫cians have monitored since March. From the front seat she taps on her smartphone to open NestStory, an app for biologists tracking bird nests, and revisits notes from the last visit here three days ago (four unleashed dogs). Then she checksyep, you guessed itthe weather, again; its clear. Grabbing her backpack, she loops binoculars around her neck, tips a spotting scope over her shoulder, and walks down the narrow trail to the beach.

By 9:30 A.M. shes scanning the sand with binoculars, then walks to the last known location of a pair of Piping Plovers near some string fencing. If she spots them inside the restricted areamarked by metal posts connected by string and signs declaring the area closed for nesting birdsCasas will watch from a distance. We want to cause the least amount of disturbance possible, she says. If one of these monitored birds performs a broken-wing displaya trick to attract the attention of a predator and lure it away from the nestCasas knows she is close to the nest.

Cautiously she moves ahead, ducking under string fencing while scanning the ground for camou簫flaged eggs before each step. Aha! She spots two black-spotted tan eggs in the sand. Casas quickly takes a GPS location, then backs away, trying to minimize her footsteps as crows may use the prints as a crumb trail leading to the eggs. Not good. You learn to be fast, in and out, she says. She watches from afar until the parents resume incubating, then returns to the car.

From the front seat, at 11 A.M., Casas notes in NestStory that the mated pair might need an extra layer of protection next time she checks on them. Piping Plover par簫ents incubate and defend their eggs for about four weeks until chicks hatch; during this vulnerable time foxes, raccoons, and dogs are pri簫mary threats. To keep predators out, Casass team encircles nests with a chicken-wire exclosure thats five feet wide. Plovers are small enough to navigate the gaps between wires, but their predators are not. The shorebird is , but its on the endangered species list for New York (and other Atlantic Coast states), earning these extra layers of protection.

The exclosures can make or break a nests success. Last year the team delayed enclosing a nest because Casas was sick; the next day predators destroyed the eggs. She refuses to let that happen again.

After saving the entry, Casas drives to the next site, Prospect Point. She arrives just past noon and repeats the drill: reads through the last visits notes, checks the weather, steps onto the beach, and scans for birds. After a close study, she concedes that the beachs plo簫ver pair hasnt laid eggs yet. Today is quiet, but come summer Casass crew will stay busy monitoring eggs and fluffy chicks, documenting how many young birds survive to fledgeand if they dont, how they died.

She walks the beach searching for signs of breeding birds, hugging the waters edge. Seeing Casass official 勛圖窪蹋 New York gear, a power walker stops the biologist to ask a question about the fenced-off area. Casas interacts with the bird-curious public often. A lot of people take pride in these birds and enjoy seeing them, she says.

She finishes scanning for nesting activity while keeping an eye on the clouds. Bad weathera thunderstorm or even an early-season hurricanemight mean extra work the next visit to a beach. Seaweed, trash, and even balloons, weave themselves into the fencing. That could cause a lot of damagebirds could get stuck in it, Casas says. She will cut debris out to prevent it from snagging birds, and repair fences as needed with the mallet she always carries in her bag. Satisfied she missed no birds, she heads back to the car.

Casas sits in the front seat with NestStory open. Its 3 P.M.the end of an average field day. She adds a note about some dog tracks worryingly close to the nesting area, then sets her phone aside. She eases her feet out of her hiking shoes and slips into flip-flops. The days work is done. Tonight shell check the weather and if tomorrow looks storm-free, shell be back at it, working to protect the beachs feathered inhabitants.

Tools of the Trade 

Shelby Casas is always ready to hit the beach. After monitoring shorebirds for several seasons, the shorebird biologist has (almost) everything she needs in her bag for a day on the sand. Somehow, her REI backpack holds it all: Its not my favorite one, but it is very sturdy, she says. Her dependable bag holds the main equipment necessary for her job: gloves, zip ties, and a mallet to repair fences, in addition to string and a roll of orange, plastic tape used to highlight the string fencing. Her Vortex binoculars, when not around her neck, live safely in her backpack. A little mesh pouch secures her knife and multitool, "because you never know, she says. In a pinch, Casas uses her lightweight towel to dry off after crossing a flooded areaor to wipe off the occasional bird poop.

Equally important is the safety gear. She always has a first aid kit and at least one Nalgene of water in her bag. Walking on the sand takes a toll on her knees (sensitive from a previous injury), making a knee brace a clutch accessory for long days. And she doesnt skimp on sunscreen, carrying both face and body sunscreen. "Ive been working on the beach now for five years and sunscreen is very important," Casas emphasizes. Ive gotten more vigilant as the years have gone by." Anti-itch cream and hand sanitizerclean public bathrooms are rare early in the seasonround out her gear.

This story originally ran in the Summer 2022 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .