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Date: September 19, 2019 at 13:38:13
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Birds are disappearing from North America

URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/19/science/bird-populations-america-canada.html


Birds Are Vanishing From North America
The number of birds in the United States and Canada
has declined by 3 billion, or 29 percent, over the
past half-century, scientists find.

By Carl Zimmer
Sept. 19, 2019
Updated 3:53 p.m. ET

224
The skies are emptying out.

The number of birds in the United States and Canada
has fallen by 29 percent since 1970, scientists
reported on Thursday. There are 2.9 billion fewer
birds taking wing now than there were 50 years ago.

The analysis, published in the journal Science, is the
most exhaustive and ambitious attempt yet to learn
what is happening to avian populations. The results
have shocked researchers and conservation
organizations.

In a statement on Thursday, David Yarnold, president
and chief executive of the National Audubon Society,
called the findings “a full-blown crisis.”

Experts have long known that some bird species have
become vulnerable to extinction. But the new study,
based on a broad survey of more than 500 species,
reveals steep losses even among such traditionally
abundant birds as robins and sparrows.

There are likely many causes, the most important of
which include habitat loss and wider use of
pesticides. “Silent Spring,” Rachel Carson’s prophetic
book in 1962 about the harms caused by pesticides,
takes its title from the unnatural quiet settling on a
world that has lost its birds:

“On the mornings that had once throbbed with the dawn
chorus of robins, catbirds, doves, jays, wrens, and
scores of other bird voices, there was now no sound.”

Kevin Gaston, a conservation biologist at the
University of Exeter, said that new findings signal
something larger at work: “This is the loss of
nature.”

Common bird species are vital to ecosystems,
controlling pests, pollinating flowers, spreading
seeds and regenerating forests. When these birds
disappear, their former habitats often are not the
same.

“Declines in your common sparrow or other little brown
bird may not receive the same attention as historic
losses of bald eagles or sandhill cranes, but they are
going to have much more of an impact,” said Hillary
Young, a conservation biologist at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, who was not involved in the
new research.

A team of researchers from universities, government
agencies and nonprofit organizations collaborated on
the new study, which combined old and new methods for
counting birds.

For decades, professional ornithologists have been
assisted by an army of devoted amateur bird-watchers
who submit their observations to databases and help
carry out surveys of bird populations each year.

In the new study, the researchers turned to those
surveys to estimate the populations of 529 species
between 2006 and 2015.

Those estimates include 76 percent of all bird species
in the United States and Canada, but represent almost
the entire population of birds. (The species for which
there weren’t enough data to make firm estimates occur
only in small numbers.)

The researchers then used bird-watching records to
estimate the population of each species since 1970,
the earliest year for which there is solid data.

“This approach of combining population abundance
estimates across all species and looking for an
overall trend is really unprecedented,” said Scott
Loss, a conservation biologist at Oklahoma State
University who was part of the new study.

While some species grew, the researchers found, the
majority declined — often by huge numbers.

“We were stunned by the result — it’s just
staggering,” said Kenneth V. Rosenberg, a conservation
scientist at Cornell University and the American Bird
Conservancy, and the lead author of the new study.

“It’s not just these highly threatened birds that
we’re afraid are going to go on the endangered species
list,” he said. “It’s across the board.”

Weather radar offered another way to track bird
populations. Dr. Rosenberg and his colleagues counted
birds recorded on radar at 143 stations across the
United States from 2007 to 2018. They focused on
springtime scans, when birds were migrating in great
numbers.

The team measured a 14 percent decline during that
period, consistent with the drop recorded in the bird-
watching records.

“If we have two data sets showing the same thing, it’s
a home run,” said Nicole Michel, a senior quantitative
ecologist at the Audubon Society who was not involved
in the study.

Among the worst-hit groups were warblers, with a
population that dropped by 617 million. There are 440
million fewer blackbirds than there once were.

Dr. Rosenberg said he was surprised by how widespread
the population drop was. Even starlings — a species
that became a fast-breeding pest after its
introduction to the United States in 1890 — have
dwindled by 83 million birds, a 49 percent decline.

Europe is experiencing a similar loss of birds, also
among common species, said Dr. Gaston, of the
University of Exeter. “The numbers are broadly
comparable,” he said.

The new study was not designed to determine why birds
are disappearing, but the results — as well as earlier
research — point to some likely culprits, Dr.
Rosenberg said.

Grassland species have suffered the biggest declines
by far, having lost 717 million birds. These birds
have probably been decimated by modern agriculture and
development.

“Every field that’s plowed under, and every wetland
area that’s drained, you lose the birds in that area,”
Dr. Rosenberg said.

In addition to habitat loss, pesticides may have taken
a toll. A study published last week, for example,
found that pesticides called neonicotinoids make it
harder for birds to put on weight needed for
migration, delaying their travel.

The researchers found some positive signs. Bald eagles
are thriving, for example, and falcon populations have
grown by 33 percent. Waterfowl are on the upswing.

For the most part, there’s little mystery about how
these happy exceptions came to be. Many recovering
bird species were nearly wiped out in the last century
by pesticides, hunting and other pressures.
Conservation measures allowed them to bounce back.

“In those cases, we knew what the causes were and we
acted on that,” Dr. Rosenberg said. “They’re models of
success.”

But some thriving populations are harder to explain.

Tiny warbler-like birds called vireos are booming,
with 89 million more birds than in 1970 — a jump of 53
percent. Yet warblers, which share the same habitats
as vireos, have suffered a 37 percent decline.

“I have no idea why vireos are doing well,” Dr.
Rosenberg said. “I’d love to do a study of vireos and
discover what their secret is.”

The sheer scale of the bird decline meant that
stopping it would require immense effort, said Dr.
Young, of the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Habitats must be defended, chemicals restricted,
buildings redesigned. “We’re overusing the world, so
it’s affecting everything,” she said.

The Audubon Society is calling for protection of bird-
rich habitats, such as the Great Lakes and the
Colorado River Basin, as well as for upholding the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which the Trump
Administration is trying to roll back.

The society and other bird advocacy groups also
suggest things that individuals can do. They urge
keeping cats inside, so they don’t kill smaller birds.
Vast numbers of birds die each year after flying into
windows; there are ways to make the glass more visible
to them.

To some birders, the study’s findings confirmed a
dreaded hunch.

Beverly Gyllenhaal, 62, a retired cookbook author, and
her husband, Anders, have spotted 256 species in parks
in the eastern United States. But when she visited her
mother in North Carolina in recent years, it seemed
there weren’t as many birds as she recalled from her
childhood there.

And when she talks to people around the United States
on her birding travels, many say the same thing.
“Oftentimes people will tell you, ‘It’s nothing like
it used to be,’” she said.

The estimated losses have left her appalled. “If the
cardinals and the blue jays and the sparrows aren’t
doing well,” she said, “that’s really scary.”

Additional link to study cited above:
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2019/09/1
8/science.aaw1313


Responses:
[16463]


16463


Date: September 19, 2019 at 14:13:38
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Birds are disappearing from North America




It's so sad where I am in Florida compared to the way it was ten
yers ago...two major factors being habitat loss and pesticides.


Responses:
None


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