Deaths caused by collisions with
buildings severely dent populations
From: Ben Whitford, The Ecologist, More from this
Affiliate from ENN.com
On a brisk May morning
in 2001, countless dying birds fell like rain from the grey Toronto sky.
In the east of the city, outside a hulking 18-storey office complex called Consilium Place, workers on cigarette breaks watched in horror as tiny feathered bodies thudded onto the pavement, fell into their laps, and crashed onto the picnic tables where they had laid out their coffee and morning snacks.
In the east of the city, outside a hulking 18-storey office complex called Consilium Place, workers on cigarette breaks watched in horror as tiny feathered bodies thudded onto the pavement, fell into their laps, and crashed onto the picnic tables where they had laid out their coffee and morning snacks.
While the office workers sought shelter, a bird enthusiast named Michael Mesure called for backup. As founder of the Fatal Light Awareness Program, or FLAP, Mesure runs a team of volunteers who patrol Toronto in search of birds that have stunned themselves - or worse - by flying into one of the city's many mirrored-glass skyscrapers. Some mornings Mesure's team doesn't find many birds: perhaps just one, or two, or twenty.
In the space of six
hours on that May morning, though, Mesure and a dozen or so volunteers found at
least 500 birds. Ruby-throated hummingbirds, dark-eyed juncos, white-throated
sparrows and Nashville warblers were carefully collected: the tiny corpses
stored in plastic bags, the injured survivors placed gently in paper sacks for
treatment and subsequent release. And still the birds kept falling. "It
was literally hailing birds," Mesure says. "It was just a real
sobering moment for us."
On a smaller scale,
experts say, such scenes are repeated daily across North America as birds,
unable to distinguish between blue sky and what Vladimir Nabokov poetically
called "the false azure in the windowpane", careen into windows at
speeds of up to 30 miles per hour. The resulting brain damage is thought to
kill about 60% of birds on impact, with many of the remainder left nursing
chipped beaks or internal injuries that subsequently prove fatal.
In all, it's estimated
that the Toronto skyline accounts for about 1 million bird deaths a year — and
even that is just a drop in the bucket. It's hard to put a precise number on
collision-related mortalities, but researcher Scott Loss of the Smithsonian
Institute is preparing to publish new research that, based on a sophisticated
analysis of 23 previous studies, estimates that between 400 million and 1
billion birds die from window impacts each year in the U.S. alone.
That eye-popping number
suggests that window impacts are putting a serious dent in the North American
bird population. There are thought to be around 10 to 20 billion birds in the
U.S., Loss says, so it's not unreasonable to assume that up to 10% of the
entire U.S. bird population dies, year-in, year-out, due to building
collisions.
Continue reading
at The Ecologist.