The piping plover is a small, stocky migratory shorebird that blends in with its sandy beach surroundings. From March to late July, piping plovers breed on Atlantic Coast beaches from Canada to Virginia. They return to the south Atlantic Coast, Gulf Coast, Bahamas and West Indies for the winter.
Since 1986, Fire Island National Seashore—together with other federal, state, and local governments, volunteers, and private organizations—has been preserving and monitoring critical habitats and open spaces for the protection of threatened and endangered shorebirds and coastal plants.
Two federally listed threatened and endangered (T & E) bird species are known to nest within Fire Island National Seashore. The (Charadrius melodus) is on the federal threatened and New York State endangered list. The (Sterna dougallii) is federally and state endangered. The state-listed threatened (Sternula antillarum) and the (Sterna hirundo) also nest on Fire Island. The black skimmer (Rhynchops niger) and the osprey (Pandion haliaetus) are bird species of special concern in New York State.
The (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) was officially removed from the federally threatened list on August 8, 2007. Eagles continue to be protected by the 1940 Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Bald eagles are occasionally sighted in the national seashore. Its presence is recorded during the annual fall hawk watch by (FIRE) near the Fire Island Lighthouse.