Movement A small part of the Chilean and Argentinian populations of two-banded plover are year-round residents. There is also a small year-round population in extreme southeastern Brazil. Most individuals from Chile and Argentina, and essentially all of those in
Tierra del Fuego, migrate north in Chile and to southern and eastern Uruguay and southeastern Brazil. The population on the Falklands is resident. Outside the breeding season the species is somewhat social and is found in loose flocks of up to about 200 birds.
Feeding The two-banded plover forages at the edge of the surf, on stranded kelp mats, in short grass, and on the edges of freshwater ponds. Its diet is mostly small invertebrates including
polychaetes,
bivalves,
gastropods, insects, and spiders.
Breeding The two-banded plover's egg season is mostly September to January but sometimes extends later. Its nest is a depression in the ground that is sometimes lined with vegetation. The clutch size is two to four eggs; both parents incubate. The incubation period and time to fledging are not known.
Vocalization What is believed to be the two-banded plover's display song is "a repeated phrase of 2–3 mellow notes followed by a gravelly trill, e.g. 'whit-whit-whitrrrrrrt'." Frequently heard calls are "a short emphatic 'pit' or mellower 'whit'." ==Status==