birds

North America is losing birds fast. Experts blame agriculture, warming

Billions fewer birds are flying through North American skies than decades ago and their numbers are shrinking ever faster, mostly due to the combination of intensive agriculture and warming temperatures, a new study finds.

Nearly half of the 261 species studied showed losses important enough to be statistically significant, and more than half of those in decline have seen losses accelerate since 1987, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Science. The study is the first to look at trends in their decrease, where they are shrinking the most and what the declines are connected to, rather than total population.

“Not only are we losing birds, we are losing them faster and faster from year to year,” said study co-author Marta Jarzyna, an ecologist at Ohio State University. “Except for forest birds, almost every group is doing poorly. So we need to ask ourselves a question. How do we protect these groups of birds?”

The only consolation is that the birds that are shrinking in numbers the fastest are species — such as the European starling, American crow, grackle and house sparrow — that aren’t yet at risk of going extinct, said study lead author Francois Leroy, also an Ohio State ecologist.

“The thing is that species extinction, they start with a decline in abundance,” Leroy said, adding that “the decline is somehow maybe giving a preview of what it could lead to in terms of species extinction.”

Cornell University conservation scientist Kenneth Rosenberg, who wasn’t part of the study, said the species declining fastest in the new research “are often considered pests or ‘trash birds,’ but if our environment cannot support healthy populations of these extreme generalists and extremely adaptable species that are tolerant of humans, then that is a very strong indicator that the environment is also toxic to humans and all other life.”

A 2019 study by Rosenberg of the same bird species found North America had 3 billion fewer birds than in 1970, but didn’t look at changes in the rate of loss or causes.

Biggest bird losses in areas warming most

The biggest locations for acceleration of bird loss were in the Mid-Atlantic, the Midwest and California, the study found. And geography proved important when Leroy and Jarzyna looked for reasons why so many bird species are shrinking ever faster.

When it came to population declines — not the acceleration — the scientists noticed bigger losses farther south. When they did a deeper analysis, they statistically connected those losses to warmer temperatures from human-caused climate change.

“In regions where temperatures increase the most, we are seeing strongest declines in populations,” Jarzyna said. “On the other hand, the acceleration of those declines, that’s mostly driven by agricultural practices.”

Farmland issues speed up bird declines

The scientists found statistical correlations between accelerating decline and high fertilizer and pesticide use and the amount of cropland, Leroy said. He said they couldn’t say any of those caused the acceleration of losses, but it indicates agriculture in general is a factor.

“The stronger the agriculture, the faster we will lose birds,” Leroy said.

Jarzyna said there is a “strong interaction” between climate change and agriculture in their effect on bird populations.

“We found that agricultural intensification causes stronger accelerations of decline in regions where climate warmed the most,” Jarzyna said.

McGill University wildlife biologist David Bird, who wasn’t part of the study, said it was done well and that its conclusions made sense. With a growing human population, agriculture practices are intensified, more bird habitats are being converted to cropland, modern machinery often grind up nests and eggs, and single crop plantings offer less possibilities for birds to find food and nests, said Bird, the editor of “Birds of Canada.”

“The biggest impact of agricultural intensity though is our war on insects. Numerous recent studies have shown that insect populations in many places throughout the world, including the U.S., have crashed by well over 40 percent,” Bird said in an email. “Many of the birds in this new study showing population declines depend heavily on insects for food.”

Birds do a lot for humans

This study is both “alarming” and “sobering” because of the sheer numbers of losses and the patterns in those accelerating declines, said Richard Gregory, head of monitoring conservation science at University College London. He was not part of the research.

The paper shows that people need to change the way they live to reduce human-caused warming, reduce agricultural intensity, monoculture of crops and broad application of chemicals, said Cornell University ornithologist Andrew Farnsworth, who wasn’t part of the study.

“Here is why this study is especially important. Birds do a lot for humans,’’ McGill biologist Bird said in an email. ”They feed us, clothe us, eat pests, pollinate our plants and crops, and warn us about impending environmental disasters. With their songs, colors, and variety, birds enrich our lives … and recent studies show that their immediate presence actually increases our well-being and happiness and can even prolong our lives! To me, a world without birds is simply unfathomable.”

Borenstein writes for the Associated Press.

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My plane was hit by birds

COMING back from your holiday should be straightforward – but for one British couple, a recent easyJet flight turned into a nightmare.

Olly Andrews, 36, and Lucy Andrews, 32, from South East London were less than 10 minutes into their flight from Amsterdam to London Luton Airport when disaster struck.

Lucy and Ollie were on their way back from Amsterdam when a bird hit their planeCredit: Lucy Andrews

The couple had been in the Dutch capital for a four-day mini-break to see their best friend get married.

But just after taking off to return home to London, the couple heard something ominous.

Lucy said: “I heard a massive thud and I looked at Olly and I was like what was that?

“Not only that but the air stewardesses suddenly went quite quiet at the back.

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“We were in the back seats, so we could hear everything and people started looking around in confusion.

“Then we were flying really low – we were going over the sea and I could see the wind turbines looked really close up.

“I was like something’s wrong, why are we flying so low to the sea and something just felt off.”

There was then an overhead message from the pilot to say that the plane had been hit by a bird and that they needed to return to Amsterdam Airport.

Lucy added: “[The pilot] was quite calm and said there’s nothing to worry about.

Olly said: “The pilot said we’d hopefully be landing in 10 minutes – that actually turned out to be like 25 minutes.”

Lucy continued: “I’m quite a nervous flyer, so I was like ‘oh my god’.

“You know it must be pretty bad if we had to do an emergency landing back in Amsterdam.

“The captain said it was most likely a seagull we hit.”

Despite being told to stay put, when the plane landed a collection of curious passengers flooded to the front of the plane to find out what happened.

She said: “As we got off the plane we could see there was gore and blood splattered all over the cockpit window and blood smeared everywhere.

The plane had to land back at Amsterdam AirportCredit: Lucy Andrews

“The pilot wouldn’t have been able to see out properly – it was everywhere.”

It became clear that the bird had hit the windscreen and then also hit other parts of the plane as blood was splattered over the tail, Lucy explained.

After getting off of the plane, the couple spent the following two and a half hours in the airport waiting for the next available flight.

During this time, there were no easyJet reps or staff around and the couple kept checking for updates via the easyJet app.

“We could only see the Gate G section and Amsterdam is a silent airport, so they didn’t announce updates.

“There was one update, but we couldn’t hear it.

“We kept refreshing the app and we couldn’t see anything, but they were giving quite regular updates such as there weren’t any sandwiches on board.

“We just wanted to go home.

When back at the airport, the couple had to wait over two hours for a replacement flightCredit: Lucy Andrews

The update said: “We’re sorry that we won’t be able to offer you any sandwiches on your flight today.

“We’ll still have a selection of snacks as well as hot and cold drinks on board.”

EasyJet did give all passengers a £6 voucher for food and drink at the airport though.

They also received a message to explain what had happened, saying: “There has been an additional delay because the plane that was scheduled for your flight today experienced a bird strike.

“Because the issue could not be resolved, we’ve decided to arrange a new plane to fly you to your destination today.”

EasyJet had to then send a plane from London Luton to collect the passengers and crew – although Lucy said they nearly missed it.

She explained: “We wouldn’t have got on the plane if we hadn’t seen a passenger who we recognised heading towards a gate and asked if there had been an announcement, which they had been.”

The couple then had to run through the airport to make their flight.

The couple has to keep checking the app for updatesCredit: Lucy Andrews

Lucy added: “We were really scared for other passengers because we recognised one passenger who was asleep and we had to wake them up and be like you’ve got to go the flight is here.”

Directly next to Lucy and Olly, the seats were empty despite a couple sitting there in the previous flight.

It wasn’t clear if this couple made the flight or not.

“The app updates were quite poorly handled because we really should have been given like regular updates.

Looking back on the incident, Lucy added: “It was described by easyJet as a ‘exceptional circumstance’ which I agree with, it was a freak incident and not the fault of easyJet.

“It was the fact that the updates for the flight weren’t communicated with the passengers.

“They have an app which gives updates and they chose to send us a message apologising that there would not be sandwiches served to us on the flight, but failed to tell us when the next flight actually was.

“It left several passengers in the lobby not knowing that the plane was being boarded.”

EasyJet has been contacted for comment.

In other aviation news, here’s what business class is like on one of the world’s best airlines – but the pre-flight lounge is even better.

Plus, a budget airline is scrapping six routes from Europe – including a mega-cheap UK flight.

Lucy described the incident as a “freak accident”Credit: Lucy Andrews

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