Sep. 20, 2019 12:02PM EST
Bird watching in the U.S. may
be a lot harder than it once was, since bird populations are dropping off in
droves, according to a new study.
The researchers found that
since 1970, North America bird populations have declined by 29 percent, a
number that approaches 3 billions birds. The extensive and thorough study, which looked at 529 different bird species and and
published in the journal Science, has produced staggering results that shocked
researchers and conservationists, according to the New York Times.
"We saw this tremendous
net loss across the entire bird community," said Ken
Rosenberg, an applied conservation scientist at the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology in Ithaca, NY, as NPR reported. "By our estimates, it's a 30
percent loss in the total number of breeding birds."
The researchers thought, at
first, that perhaps the total population had just shifted to favor birds that
are adapted to live around humans, like geese, pigeons and European starlings.
What the scientists did not know is how large the net change in the bird
population is, according to NPR, and the declines far outpaced the gains.
"We expected to see
continuing declines of threatened species," said Rosenberg, in a press
release. "But for the first time, the results also showed pervasive
losses among common birds across all habitats, including backyard birds."
To study avian populations,
the bird researchers analyzed a combination of data that included long-term
population surveys as well as weather radar data. The study found that
grassland birds fared the worst — including well-known species of sparrows,
warblers, blackbirds and finches. Those birds have seen their populations
decline by 53 percent since 1970, as National Geographic reported.
"We should take it as
staggering, devastating news," said study senior author Peter Marra, director of the Georgetown Environment
Initiative at Georgetown University, to National Geographic.
Birds are essential to a
well-balanced ecosystem. They play a vital role as pollinators and seed
distributors. They also help keep insect populations in check and they dispose
of rotting carcasses.
In total, the results showed
that 90 percent of the population loss is attributed to just a dozen bird
families. Some of the biggest losses are from common songbirds like
meadowlarks, dark-eyed juncos, horned larks and red-winged blackbirds, said
Rosenberg, as NPR reported.
"It's not just these
highly threatened birds that we're afraid are going to go on the endangered
species list," said Rosenberg, as the New York Times reported. "It's across the
board."
Besides the tremendous decline
of grassland birds, the population of shorebirds, which are already at
dangerously low numbers, dropped by one-third.
"We're losing common
species," said Marra, as Smithsonian reported. "We're not keeping common
species common. We're failing at that."
When common birds disappear,
it has the potential to change an entire ecosystem.
"Declines in your common
sparrow or other little brown bird may not receive the same attention as
historic losses of bald eagles or sandhill cranes, but they are going to have
much more of an impact," said Hillary Young, a conservation biologist at
the University of California, Santa Barbara, who was not involved in the new
research, to the New York Times.
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