Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Missing: Nearly 3 billion birds that used to live in North America

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

North America has lost nearly 3 billion birds since 1970, according to a new analysis of bird survey and radar data.

The sharp decline, described in a study in the journal Science, is not just bad for birds. It also bodes ill for the ecosystems those birds inhabit, and points to a need for action to halt and perhaps reverse the drop, scientists said.

“Three billion was a pretty astounding number for us,” said lead author Kenneth Rosenberg, a conservati­on scientist at Cornell University and American Bird Conservanc­y.

Many animals are threatened with extinction because of human activity, but that’s not the only problem they face. Loss of abundance spells trouble too because it can have profound consequenc­es for the ecosystems they inhabit.

Conservati­onists studying North American birds had known that some at least some species were declining, but they didn’t know what the net loss, or gain, might be.

“Previously we didn’t have good estimates of population size,” Rosenberg said. “We knew the trends, but we didn’t really know how many birds of each kind were out there.”

To find out, he and his colleagues analyzed more than a dozen bird survey data sets that covered 529 bird species across a host of ecosystems in the U.S. and Canada. These data sets, such as the North American Breeding Bird Survey, rely on citizen scientists to conduct counts along roadsides across North America every year, and boast records going back decades.

The researcher­s were also able to track feathered fliers with a network of 143 weather radars, which often catch migrating birds on their nighttime routes.

The data added up to a grim conclusion: Over nearly half a century, bird population­s in North America had experience­d a steep decline. There are 2.9 billion fewer birds today than there were in 1970 – a reduction of 29%.

Steven Beissinger, a conservati­on biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, called the results and their implicatio­ns “dizzying.”

“I was pretty surprised,” said Beissinger, who was not involved in the study. “We don’t usually think in billions of birds.”

Of those lost birds, 90% come from just 12 bird families that include common and widespread species such as sparrows, swallows, warblers and finches.

Declines in the abundance of common species may not seem as dramatic as the endangerme­nt of rare ones, but it is a very serious form of ecosystem erosion, the scientists said.

That’s because abundant species often play important roles in their biomes, whether they control pests, pollinate flowers, disperse seeds, provide food for other animals and even contribute to the natural beauty of an area that draws tourists who support local economies.

“When you’re losing abundance, you’re losing the fabric of the food chains, the fabric of the ecosystems – more perhaps than losing one rare species,” Rosenberg said.

Other formerly common species have fallen from mere loss of abundance to eliminatio­n.

Rosenberg pointed to the example of the passenger pigeon. Once it was probably the most abundant bird on the planet, but it was hunted into extinction by 1914. He added that the trend line of passenger pigeons’ losses looks similar to the trend seen in the new study, according to work by one of his coauthors, Jessica Stanton of the U.S. Geological Survey.

“Nobody ever thought the passenger pigeon would go extinct – and it did in a relatively short period,” Rosenberg said. “We’re not saying these other birds are on their way to extinction, but it certainly should give us pause and make us concerned that we’re seeing that level of decline.”

Across ecosystems, grassland birds – a group that includes sparrows and meadowlark­s – were hit the hardest, the researcher­s said. Since 1970, their numbers have fallen by more than 720 million, representi­ng 53% of the initial population.

More than 1 billion birds have been lost from all forest biomes. Shorebirds, long threatened by the draining of coastal wetlands and urbanizati­on, saw declines of more than 37%.

The researcher­s did not weigh in on the causes for these declines. But other work has pointed to habitat loss due to urbanizati­on, pollution, pesticides, and the intensific­ation and expansion of agricultur­e as likely culprits, Rosenberg said.

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? A Baltimore oriole observes from the willows.
Getty Images/tns A Baltimore oriole observes from the willows.

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