Peripapillary glial cells (PPGCs) are a peculiar macroglia in avian species, located in the central retina adjacent to the optic nerve head. PPGCs have a similar shape and orientation to Müller cells, which traverse the entire layer of the retina; however, there are differences in protein expression between the two cell types. In the present study, we first demonstrated that PPGCs expressed αB-crystallin, which is not expressed in Müller cells, during retinal development. αB-crystallin was first faintly expressed in PPGCs of the E5 retina, adjacent to the optic nerve head. Further, αB-crystallin was exclusively expressed in PPGCs up to E14. The shape of these cells was bipolar with vitread and ventricular processes. The vitread processes of αB-crystallin+ PPGCs became finer at E18. Double labeling analysis clearly demonstrated that only vimentin+ or GFAP+ astrocytes were located in the optic nerve head and were demarcated from the retina by αB-crystallin+ PPGCs. Furthermore, we determined that αB-crystallin+ PPGCs, with a number of processes, completely wrapped the optic nerve head and were densely located in the junction of the optic nerve head and the retina in a whole mount preparation and in vertical-sectioned retinae. The results of present study, together with reports that retinal astrocytes migrate from the optic nerve head, suggest that PPGCs prevent astrocytes from migrating into the retina in avian species.