Birds
US and
Canada have lost more than one in four birds since 1970
Three
billion birds have been lost across diverse groups and habitats, in what
researchers describe as a ‘wake-up call’
The age of
extinction is supported by
Band
Foundation and Wyss FoundationAbout this content
Emily
Holden in Washington
Thu 19 Sep
2019 19.00 BST
The US and
Canada have lost more than one in four birds – a total of three billion – since
1970, culminating in what scientists who published a new study are calling a
“widespread ecological crisis”.
Researchers
observed a 29% decline in bird populations across diverse groups and habitats –
from songbirds such as meadowlarks to long-distance migratory birds such as
swallows and backyard birds like sparrows.
“Multiple,
independent lines of evidence show a massive reduction in the abundance of
birds,” said Ken Rosenberg, the study’s lead author and a senior scientist at
the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and American Bird Conservancy.
The
population losses are consistent with what scientists have counted among
insects and amphibians.
The study,
published today in the journal Science, did not analyze the reason for the
drop. But around the world, birds are thought to be dying more and having less
success breeding largely because their habitats are being damaged and destroyed
by agriculture and urbanization.
Researchers
calculated the declines with 10 years of information on migratory birds from
weather radar stations and 50 years of data from the ground. Sources include
citizen science from the United States Geological Survey, the Canadian Wildlife
Service, the Audubon Christmas Bird Count and Manomet’s International Shorebird
Survey.
A
black-bellied plover searches for food on the shore of the Salton Sea Lake near
Bombay Beach, California.
Grassland
birds were hit especially hard, with a 53% reduction in population. Shorebirds
were already at low numbers and now have lost more than one-third of their
population. Radar of the night skies found that the volume of spring migration
has dropped 14% in just the last decade.
Domestic
cats, collisions with glass and buildings, and a decline in the insects birds
eat – probably because of widespread pesticide use – also contribute to the
dwindling bird numbers. And climate change compounds those problems by altering
bird habitats.
Not all
bird species declined. Raptors and waterfowl showed gains, probably because of
focused conservation efforts, including under the Endangered Species Act.
Co-author
Michael Parr, president of the American Bird Conservancy, said saving birds
will require policy changes, bans on harmful pesticides and funds for bird
conservation.
“Each of us
can make a difference with everyday actions that together can save the lives of
millions of birds – actions like making windows safer for birds, keeping cats
indoors, and protecting habitat,” Parr said.
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