1.5
billion birds missing from North American skies, ‘alarming’
report finds
The report
also listed 86 species of birds, including the Canadian warbler, that
are threatened by plummeting populations, habitat destruction and
climate change.
14
August, 2016
North
American skies have grown quieter over the last decades by the absent
songs of 1.5 billion birds, says the latest summary of bird
populations.
The
survey by dozens of government, university and environmental agencies
across North America has also listed 86 species of birds —
including once-common and much-loved songbirds such as the evening
grosbeak and Canada warbler — that are threatened by plummeting
populations, habitat destruction and climate change.
“The
information on urgency is quite alarming,” said Partners In Flight
co-author Judith Kennedy of Environment Canada. “We’re really
getting down to the dregs of some of these populations.”
The
report is the most complete survey of land bird numbers to date and
attempts to assess the health of populations on a continental basis.
It concludes that, while there are still a lot of birds in the sky,
there aren’t anywhere near as many as there used to be.
Evening
grosbeaks are down 92 per cent since 1970. Snowy owls have lost 64
per cent of their numbers. The Canada warbler has lost 63 per cent of
it population.
Tally
it all up and there should be another 1.5 billion birds perching in
backyards and flying around in forests than there are, says the
report.
Nor
are the declines stopping. Among those 86 species, 22 have already
lost at least half of their population since 1970 and are projected
to lose another 50 per cent of their numbers within the next 40
years.
For
at least six species, this “half-life” window is fewer than 20
years.
The
culprits are familiar.
Agriculture
disturbs habitat of grassland birds and introduces pesticides into
the landscape. Logging fragments the intact forests birds use as
refuelling stations as they migrate. Domestic cats are thought to
kill more than two billion birds a year.
“It’s
the death of a thousand cuts,” said Kennedy.
At
stake is much more than the pleasure of a little back-window bird
song.
The
report says birds are crucial indicators of overall ecosystem health.
Healthy forests and prairies need healthy bird populations, said
Kennedy.
“(They)
only function because of that abundance.”
As
well, birds — like bees — pollinate plants. And birds eat bugs.
Lots of bugs.
“We
would be bitten by a lot more mosquitoes (with fewer birds).”
There
are still up to five billion birds that leave Canada every winter.
But Kennedy said the time to start thinking about their future is
now, before some species start to decrease.
“It’s
too late for us to worry when we’re down to the last few hundred.”
The
Partners In Flight report reinforces messages from several previous,
related studies.
Earlier
this year, the North American Bird Conservation Initiative found
one-third of all North American bird species need quick help to stop
them from disappearing, with more than half of all seabird species on
the road to extinction without conservation action.
A
2014 study by the Audubon Society found climate change could cost 126
species more than half their current range by 2050.
A
McGill University study in 2015 concluded more than 70 per cent of
global forests are within a kilometre of a road, field, town or other
human disturbance — easily close enough to degrade forest habitat.
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