More Than Half Of North American Birds In Trouble
Thanks To Climate Change
AP | By SETH BORENSTEIN
Posted: 09/08/2014 10:01 pm EDT Updated:
09/09/2014 10:59 am EDT
WASHINGTON
(AP) — As the world gets warmer, the Baltimore oriole will no longer be found
in Maryland .
The Mississippi
kite will move north, east and pretty much out of its namesake state. And the California gull will mostly be a summer stranger to the Golden State .
Those are
among the conclusions in a new National Audubon Society report that looks at
the potential effects of global warming on birds by the year 2080.
"This
will spell trouble for most birds," said Gary Langham, the society's chief
scientist and vice president.
Over the
next six decades or so, the critical ranges of more than half the 588 North
American bird species will either shrink significantly or move into uncharted
territory for the animal, according to Langham's analysis.
While other
studies have made similar pronouncements, this report gives the most
comprehensive projections of what is likely to happen to America 's
birds.
The report
says that in a few decades, 126 bird species will end up with a much smaller
area to live in, which the society says will make them endangered. An
additional 188 species will lose more than half their natural range but
relocate to new areas. Those moves will be threatening to the birds' survival,
too, because they will be confronted with different food and soil, bird experts
said.
Other
birds, including backyard regulars like the American robin and the blue jay,
will fly in even more places, the report says. And some of the biggest
potential winners aren't exactly birds that people like — species such as the
turkey vulture, the American crow and the mourning dove, which will expand
their ranges tremendously.
"If
you want to know what the climate change future sounds like, it sounds a lot
like a mourning dove," Langham said. Some people find annoying the singing
of the mourning dove, which will more than double its range.
Langham
used bird survey data in summer and winter from 2000 to 2009 and correlated it
to climate conditions to come up with simulations of how bird ranges will
change. He then tested the simulations against past data from 1980 to 1999, and
they worked. Then he used United Nations carbon pollution scenarios from 2007
to project bird ranges in 2020, 2040 and 2080.
The report
is not yet peer-reviewed, which is crucial in science. It has been sent to a
scientific journal but has not yet been accepted. However, Langham said it is
based on a report Audubon did last year that was commissioned by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service.
"It's
very scary," Root said. "People need to stand up and take note."
On Tuesday,
several federal agencies, Cornell University and a number of private organizations will
release a separate U.S.
"state of the birds" report, and the outlook will be bleak.
Cornell Lab
of Ornithology director John Fitzpatrick wrote in a preview last month in The
New York Times that 230 species "are currently in danger of extinction or
at risk of becoming so" and that two dozen common birds, such as
nighthawks, are showing "early warning signals of distress."
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