Charlestown has its dark sky ordinance
By Cornell Lab of Ornithology
This trend is a real concern
for birds that fly at night during spring and fall migration and even during
non-migratory seasons. Results of the study by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology
and Colorado State University are published in Ecosphere.
"The southeastern United States, Mexico, and especially Central America
are important migration corridors," said lead author Frank La Sorte
at the Cornell Lab. "Evidence that nocturnally migrating birds are
encountering increasing light pollution levels within these regions is
concerning.
Birds largely avoid light during the breeding and non-breeding season.
During migration, however, these associations break down
as birds travel across a wide range of habitats, including populated areas that
contain higher light pollution levels."
The
study used data from eBird to generate weekly estimates of relative abundance
for the 42 study species. eBird is a Cornell Lab citizen-science program in
which volunteer bird watchers enter their observations from anywhere in the
world. The authors intersected the weekly abundance estimates with
satellite-based measures of year-round light pollution compiled over
a 22-year period.
Scientists found that all 42 bird species they studied occurred in regions with
increasing light pollution levels. The strongest increases occurred during
migration, especially for birds that migrated through Central America. The
weakest increases occurred for birds that spent the summer breeding season in
the northeastern United States.
"Reversing light pollution trends in Central America, especially during
the spring, and launching Lights Out programs during intense migration periods
could save a substantial number of migrating birds," added study
co-author Kyle Horton at Colorado State University. “Reversing light pollution
trends in the southeastern United States during the summer breeding season and
in Central America during the winter non-breeding season would generate the
greatest benefits outside of migration periods."
The hope is that by determining where and when birds are likely to encounter
existing or increasing light pollution will lead to more effective efforts to
reduce risks and increase bird survival.
Reference:
La
Sorte, Frank, Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Horton, Kyle, Colorado State
University; Johnston, Alison, Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Fink, Daniel,
Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Auer, Tom, Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Seasonal associations with light
pollution trends for nocturnally migrating bird populations. 2022.
Ecosphere.
This project was supported by The Leon Levy Foundation, The Wolf Creek
Charitable Foundation, Lyda Hill Philanthropies, Amon G. Carter Foundation, and
National Science Foundation. Computing support was provided by the National
Science Foundation and the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery
Environment and the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center.