Citizen scientists provide the research data
Pat Leonard, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
The sparrow and the hawk |
Their fate in the U.S. and Canada is less well known. A new study by Cornell Lab of Ornithology scientists aims to clarify the status of this non-native species, using 21 years of citizen science data from the Cornell Lab’s Project FeederWatch.
The results are published in the Wilson Journal of
Ornithology.
"We wanted to find out where and how much House Sparrows might be
declining here," explains lead author Liam Berigan, who did this work
while at the Cornell Lab and who is now a Ph.D. student at the University of
Maine.
"We also explored whether the declines would match up with an
increase in hawk populations, as is true in European studies. Surprisingly,
they didn't."
Findings
for the U.S. and Canada:
Winter
flocks in urban areas were larger than flocks in rural areas.
House
Sparrows declined in urban areas but remained stable in rural areas.
The
study found that declines in House Sparrow populations were no greater when
Sharp-shinned or Cooper’s Hawks were also present.
From
1995 to 2016, the proportion of FeederWatch sites reporting House Sparrows
declined by 7.5% and mean flock sizes declined by 22%.
"When even a bird as common as the House Sparrow is experiencing population declines, this is probably a reflection on the state of the environment," says Berigan. "In Europe, a lack of urban green space and nesting sites are threats. It's likely some of those same factors are at work in North America and contribute to House Sparrow declines here."
Reference:
Liam A. Berigan, Emma I. Greig, David N. Bonter. Urban House Sparrow (Passer domesticus) populations decline in North America. Wilson Journal of Ornithology. February 2021.