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bird population decline

 
 
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 01:08 pm
This takes a bit of space but I thought it important:

By Mark Clayton | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor



Sci/Tech > Environment
from the December 02, 2004 edition


SONGBIRD: The cerulean warbler is threatened by mining in the forests of Appalachia. Its population has fallen nearly 80 percent since 1966 to about 560,000 birds.
AP/FILE



North American birds on the decline

Nearly a third of native bird species - even common ones - are seeing striking losses, says a survey.

By Mark Clayton | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Nearly two centuries ago, vast herds of buffalo were almost wiped off the face of America's great plains by settlers. Today it's the prairie chicken that's getting plucked.
Once plentiful like the buffalo, the prairie chicken was dubbed the "fool's hen" because it was so easy to shoot. Even so, the delectable but hardy species survived. As recently as the 1980s, healthy numbers could be found "booming" their songs across the plains.


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But a new survey shows that the greater prairie chicken species is in trouble. Since 1966, its population has fallen 78 percent. Fewer than 700,000 individual birds remain. It's a fate shared by many species - from the cerulean warbler to the chimney swift to the northern bobwhite.

In a striking trend that spans North America's key ecosystem regions - grassland, shrubland, forest, wetland, and urban - almost a third of 654 bird species native to North America are in "statistically significant decline," according to a first-ever "State of the Birds" report unveiled last month by the Audubon Society.

"We've painted a picture people didn't know before - that there's a big fraction of our bird populations that are facing serious problems," says Greg Butcher, a wildlife biologist and author of the report, which draws on decades' worth of data from major bird population surveys.

Grassland species are in the most trouble, with 19 of 27 species analyzed - 70 percent - in significant decline since 1966. But what's affecting the prairie chicken and other grassland species is not a single cause - such as too much hunting - but instead a "perfect storm" of habitat loss, predators, and changing farming and ranching practices, researchers say.

Ironically, the resurgence of some predator birds, such as hawks, have made it harder for prairie chickens to find a peaceful home on the range. More intense cattle grazing, proliferating power lines, roads, fencing, housing, and shopping malls - even huge new electrical wind generators - have added to the pressure.

The lesser prairie chicken, in rapid decline like the greater prairie chicken, instinctively resists nesting anywhere near trees or man-made structures - especially tall towers or buildings, where birds of prey can perch and spot them below, according to recent studies by Kansas State University biologists.

"One of the biggest threats on the horizon is wind farms," says Steve Sherrod, executive director of the George Miksch Sutton Avian Research Center in Bartlesville, Okla. "These wind farms are billed as green, but they're a huge threat to the prairie nesting species."

Other grassland birds are similarly affected. The bobolink, for instance, nests in hayfields and northern grasslands of the United States. But more frequent haying, overgrazing, and other man-made changes have combined to cut its population in half to about 11 million, the report says.

Similar declines show up in other ecosystems. The northern bobwhite, a common bird with a call familiar to millions, prefers shrublands - sagebrush and chaparral - which span 20 percent of the Lower 48 states. Yet conversion of shrublands to grazing and ill-timed burning of farm fields have cut its numbers by more than two-thirds to 9 million.

Woodland species are struggling, too. In the Appalachian forests, the cerulean warbler is threatened by mountaintop mining, its population falling nearly 80 percent since 1966 to about 560,000 birds today. Meanwhile, the pine siskin, a woodland finch common at backyard bird feeders, fell by more than half to about 22 million birds, the report says.

Such drops are relatively recent. Far larger declines in bird populations occurred before bird surveys were common. The postwar shift from family farms to industrial farming brought massive bird mortality on the grasslands. Flocks seen today are just a shadow of the size of bird populations in North America's recent past, researchers say.

"What we're looking at in this era is habitat loss due to intense economic use of the land," Mr. Butcher says. "Obviously, urban expansion is tremendously important. But it's the farming, logging, [and] mining that's really affecting large numbers of birds."

Not all bird populations are dwindling. Of 45 urban species tracked, for example, 44 are considered of "low or no concern" in terms of the health of overall population numbers.

There are several success stories, too. By the 1950s and 1960s, bluebirds had disappeared from large parts of their range. But bluebirds rebounded strongly as Boy Scouts and bluebird societies put up houses for the species in the 1970s and 1980s, providing a substitute for the nesting cavities of old-growth trees that had been logged.

The whooping crane, which numbered just 14 to 16 birds in 1941, has rebounded to about 300 today. Many predatory birds - including the city-dwelling peregrine falcon, bald eagle, and brown pelican - have undergone a steady recovery since the pesticide DDT was banned in 1974. Double-crested cormorants, nearly extinct in the 1960s, are today considered a pest by fishermen.

Still, many experts find the new report sobering. "This is a major step forward, a first realization that we as a society have to pay attention to these birds," says Russell Greenberg, director of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. "This analysis should show us that we can't just ignore all birds except the endangered species and the game birds."

Ignored species are something Dr. Greenberg knows a bit about. For years he was nearly alone in studying the plight of the rusty blackbird.

The "rusty" isn't a typically beautiful songbird - its call sounds like "a creaking, rusty gate," Greenberg says. In some states it is even classified as "vermin" that can be exterminated freely. Only its rusty scaling and yellow eyes set it apart from other blackbirds.

But something mysterious has slashed 98 percent of its population in just under four decades - putting it at the top of Audubon's list of fast-declining species. Is it logging in Canada's boreal forest where the rusty breeds in the spring? Parasites? Whatever it is, it threatens to extinguish the rusty soon if something isn't done, Greenberg says.

What heartens Butcher is that birds have shown they can bounce back if humans meet them halfway. Getting farmers and ranchers to time brush burning to accommodate the prairie chicken would be a good first step, he adds.

"These North American birds can withstand a lot of insult without going extinct," Butcher says. "So if we change our ways we have a chance to save them and allow the populations to rebound."


SCOTT WALLACE - STAFF / SOURCE: NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY "STATE OF THE BIRDS" REPORT


bird percent of remaining
loss population

1. rusty blackbird 97.9% 2,000,000
2. Henslow's sparrow 96.4% 79,000
3. common tern 90.6% 1,400,000
4. verdin 85.6% 8,900,000
5. Sprague's pipit 83.8% 870,000
6. pinyon jay 82.5% 4,100,000
7. short eared owl 80.3% 2,400,000
8. cerulean warbler 79.6% 560,000
9. black throated sparrow 79.6% 27,000,000
10. loggerhead shrike 77.1% 4,200,000
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Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 01:13 pm
It's quite similar here in Europe:


Doubtful future for European birds
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 01:21 pm
Thanks for the info Walter. This is close to my heart as I am a volunteer raptor bander for U. S. fish and wildlife.
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Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 01:43 pm
When we moved into the woods, sixteen years ago, we had at least three male towhees announcing their territorial imperatives. Last spring there were none.

Sixteen years ago between 5 and 8 male rose breasted grosbeaks would hang out at hour feeders in April, waiting for the ladies to arrive from the south. Last spring there were two.
0 Replies
 
Pitter
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 07:57 pm
I moved to a house in the woods in Missouri in '81. The first year there were Chuck-Wills-Widows every night in the Spring. For the next twenty odd years to present there are none ?!.
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 08:19 pm
Bob! It's wonderful to see you!
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Dec, 2004 10:19 pm
Hey--LittleK my love. So good to hear your "voice" again. Hope all is well with you. I reached the sanguine age of 65 in October. Add this to your store of knowledge. Being old is when your sweety says "let's go upstairs and have sex and you answer "Pick one--I can't do both."
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ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 8 Dec, 2004 10:49 am
I think it's good to see bobsmythhawk back here too.
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cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Wed 8 Dec, 2004 11:40 am
Ruffed Grouse, my favorite game bird, have been in decline for many years. Fifteen years ago, hunting the 100 or so acres I have access to in northern Michigan, it wasn't uncommon to drum out 10 or more birds a day without a dog. Now, I'd be lucky to even hear one, much less get a shot.

Here's some info on the prairie chicken.

http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/caer/ce/eek/critter/bird/prairiechicken.htm

In the early 1900's, there were fewer than 100,000 wild turkey left in North America. Today they are estimated at over 5,600,000, due to the efforts of conservationists. Sportsmen contribute $1.7 billion every year for conservation through license fees and individual contributions to organizations such as Ducks Unlimited.
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 8 Dec, 2004 12:49 pm
Hi cjhsa:

Thanks for the link. I remember Walt Disney did a series of wildlife films one of which was "The Vanishing Prairie" done in 1954. If my memory is not deluding me that was the one in which prairie chickens were shown doing their distinctive mating dance apparently emulated by the plains Indians in their dances.

On a more personal note when I was young (a half century ago) the eastern mountain bluebird was commonly seen in this area (Massachusetts). Not any more. I know of bird boxes put out by some people and a small community of them doing well close to us. During the fall bird migration while banding hawks for U. S. fish and wildlife I see bluebirds going through but not many.

I appreciate your information
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 8 Dec, 2004 01:06 pm
Bob, Don't I know you? Are you not originally from Canada?

The moorhens which I have so loved to watch, that once were prolific and feisty, no longer visit my pond. When you speak of books and films that are phrophetic, I think of Rachel Carson and her book Silent Spring.

http://www.ecotopia.org/ehof/carson/bio.html

Welcome back, my friend
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 10:29 am
Hi Letty:

No. I grew up in Somerville, Massachusetts. Now living in Hull, Mass. Real name Robert Edward Smith. I would have liked being born in Canada though as I'm a city guy enamored of the outdoors. You've certainly got more of that than we have. As a matter of fact when I got married our honeymoon was spent tenting tenting at Moosehead Lake in Maine. Many many years ago.
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Synonymph
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 10:45 am
My yard is an exception to this decline, at least currently. We're still seeing numerous songbirds of countless varieties (I have a list somewhere) at our feeders, and also several breathtakingly lovely woodpeckers. Hawks swoop by frequently. Owlsong can be heard at night.

I'm going to join one of the local bluebird box projects.
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 11:29 am
Cinnes, you just reminded me that I haven't seen one woodpecker in a long while. They use to peck away at my palms and even drill on my metal gutters. How odd.

Bob, It seems there was a interaction between you and me about your having been divorced and I replied with "Thank God and Greyhound"....she's gone. Where I got the idea that you were from Canada is beyond me.

I do hope you get your hawk back; you might even settle for an osprey. Smile
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 12:57 pm
The osprey is a fish hawk and beautiful with a 6 foot wingspan. The woods hawks (accipiters) of which the goshawk is the largest inspire me more. We could throw a fish for the osprey out in front of our nets during banding season but I don't think it would work.
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Piffka
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 01:29 pm
Hi Bob Smith -- Did the tale of PaleMale bring you out of your hiding spot? Good to see you and thanks for posting this. I don't know if you remember me, but I remember you from abuzz. (I posted as pfkflyer.)

The decline of bird species is not unexpected since people are destroying habitat everywhere. One thing not mentioned is that farmers (and others) no longer leave the same broad margins of unplowed land around their fields as they used to do. I suppose, they don't because of the pressures to get the maximum yield from each acre. Even a relatively small but totally undisturbed area will provide habitat. I do enjoy going to my sister's farm and seeing all the hawks though. They are great at keeping the rodent population down.

Btw, we have Spotted Towhees here (the new name for the western species)... many happy ones. I saw a couple today. I feed the birds (sunflower seeds & suet) year-round because there is much less forage available for them then before we moved in twenty years ago... and even less since we've had neighbors move in on either side. We also left what we could of native stands of trees and shrubs and offer water in several spots. Gotta do what we can while we're here. I also pick up and dispose of fishing line whenever I find it as I walk along the shore -- it's a danger to fish, shore birds and probably seals. Some fishermen just don't get it, even now, and strip their line and toss it on the ground.
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 02:15 pm
Hi Piffka. You are indeed warmly remembered. I have a feeder outside the window where I used to abuzz and now A2K. It's funny when they empty the feeder and I don't notice immediately, the sparrows line up on the railing and yell at me. Always brings a chuckle. I see woodpeckers there and warblers and occasional goldfinches.

There is some hope as attested by the reforestation of the northeastern United States. I know we often feel dismayed at the scope of so many of them and not enough of us. But I firmly believe you don't just fight the fights that can be won. If it's right you go down swinging.

As regards Pale Male I've been aware for some time. It's certainly short sighted of them to destroy the nest as the natural prey is pigeons, mice and rats. All these things are much more odious than a single nest out the way that gives so many so much pleasure.
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Piffka
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 02:41 pm
You remember me? Oh, nice.

I get harassed by the little brown squirrels (Douglas Squirrel) when there is no food and I sometimes get dive-bombed when I go out if the feeders haven't been filled recently enough to suit the guests. It is gratifying to have the birds feel confident enough of me that they will fly to a feeder within hand's reach. I mostly have, year-round, a couple of kinds of chickadees and some nuthatches, but there are Fox sparrows and enough woodpeckers to make it interesting. When I'm in the mood, I'll put out peanuts and enjoy the Stellar Jays' antics. They're pretty funny.

I like this: "If it's right you go down swinging." I guess that's why I keep doing what little I do.

I want to say, I admire you for your work with raptors. They, uhh, scare me! Maybe I was a mouse in a previous life. Very Happy I do enjoy seeing them -- we often see Bald Eagles around here, and Red Tails, and Swainson's, as well as Osprey and even the odd accipiter. We even get Merlins sometimes. (A friend has a suspected Merlin in her freezer right now -- it ran into a window. She's saving it for the Coastal Forest Merlin Project, a small group that studies the Black Merlin.)
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 03:21 pm
Jays are very bright birds. Evidence for this was supplied by a jay who would visit the feeder. The feeder is designed to only accept small birds. When he discovers no small birds there and knowing he can't alight on it he starts a series of raucous cries and soon the sparrows appear. They hit the feeder and as usual spill lots on the porch. This is what he wanted and immediately starts gobbling the spilled seeds.
0 Replies
 
Piffka
 
  1  
Reply Thu 9 Dec, 2004 04:24 pm
Haha. I like that Jays have so many voices, too. We have one that's been around a couple of years, I swear, it sounds just like a cat mewing. It's gotten me out of my chair to check on the "kitty" more than once. Then I'm so charmed that I usually hand out some peanuts.

I have a great book called "Bird Brains" that lauds several kinds of birds for their brains. Truly amazing that such a small skull can think. Have you ever seen that experiment with the wild NZ parrot on TV? Worth looking for... here's a bit about it:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/animals/features/132index.shtml
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