Feature Channels: Birds

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Released: 17-Feb-2021 11:35 AM EST
Birds and Rural Sprawl
Wildlife Conservation Society

A new study in the journal Diversity by researchers from Paul Smith’s College Adirondack Watershed Institute (AWI) and Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) finds that bird communities in two rapidly developing rural landscapes react differently to increased “rural sprawl.”

Released: 15-Feb-2021 1:50 PM EST
Regional variation in the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on data collection
Cornell University

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed human behavior, and that has major consequences for data-gathering citizen-science projects such as eBird, run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Newly published research finds that when human behaviors change, so do the data.

Released: 11-Feb-2021 9:25 AM EST
Study Finds Even the Common House Sparrow is Declining
Cornell University

A new study by Cornell Lab of Ornithology scientists aims to clarify the status of the non-native European House Sparrow, using 21 years of citizen science data from the Cornell Lab’s Project FeederWatch.

Released: 9-Feb-2021 11:55 AM EST
Starling Success Traced to Rapid Adaptation
Cornell University

Love them or hate them, there’s no doubt the European Starling is a wildly successful bird. A new study from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology examines this non-native species from the inside out to learn what exactly happened at the genetic level as the starling population exploded and spread all across North America?

3-Feb-2021 3:35 PM EST
As climate change cranks up the heat in the Mojave Desert, not all species are equally affected
Iowa State University

A new study shows how climate change is having a much greater impact on birds than small mammals in the Mojave Desert in the southwestern United States. The study could inform conservation practices and shed new light on how climate change affects various species differently. The research drew on cutting-edge computer modeling as well as survey data from more than 100 years ago.

Released: 28-Jan-2021 9:45 AM EST
How Many Birds Will You Find?
Cornell University

The 24th annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) is a great opportunity for all budding birdwatchers and bird-count veterans to use their skills. People from around the world count the birds they see for at least 15 minutes on one or more days of the count, and then enter their checklists online. The GBBC takes place February 12 through 15.

Released: 25-Jan-2021 12:10 PM EST
Scientists show impact of human activity on bird species
Durham University

Scientists have shown where bird species would exist in the absence of human activity under research that could provide a new approach to setting conservation priorities.

12-Jan-2021 8:45 AM EST
Foraging humans, mammals and birds who live in the same place behave similarly
University of Bristol

Foraging humans find food, reproduce, share parenting, and even organise their social groups in similar ways as surrounding mammal and bird species, depending on where they live in the world, new research has found.

   
Released: 21-Dec-2020 8:55 AM EST
Study Examines Attitudes Toward Non-Native Birds
Cornell University

A new study from scientists at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology examines public attitudes toward non-native bird species and whether people are willing to manage them to protect native cavity-nesting birds, such as Eastern Bluebirds and the American Kestrel. The findings are published in the Journal of Environmental Management.

Released: 9-Dec-2020 2:45 PM EST
Less Light, More Trees Assist Migrating Birds
Cornell University

Scientists from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Colorado State University used observations from the Lab’s eBird citizen-science program to estimate the seasonal species richness of nocturnally migrating passerines within 333 well surveyed urban areas in the contiguous U.S. “Richness” is defined as the number of different species in an area.

Released: 30-Nov-2020 2:50 PM EST
Holiday Gifts That Give Back to Birds and Nature
Cornell University

There's been a huge bump in the number of people connecting with birds and nature as people stuck close to home during this past year, and the trend is continuing. The perfect gift for new—and veteran—birdwatchers is the gift of knowledge. There's so much to learn about birds! Below are holiday gift ideas that are meaningful and environmentally friendly—and your purchase supports the nonprofit conservation work at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

Released: 24-Nov-2020 1:55 PM EST
Study: Clean Air Act Saved 1.5 Billion Birds
Cornell University

U.S. pollution regulations meant to protect humans from dirty air are also saving birds. So concludes a new continentwide study published today in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Study authors found that improved air quality under a federal program to reduce ozone pollution may have averted the loss of 1.5 billion birds during the past 40 years.

Released: 23-Nov-2020 4:05 PM EST
The Impact of Mercury in New York State
Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI)

Biodiversity Research Institute announced that a series of scientific studies that assessed the impact of mercury on air, water, fish, and wildlife in New York State was published in the journal Ecotoxicology, an international journal devoted to presenting critical research on the effects of toxic chemicals on people and the environment.

Released: 17-Nov-2020 3:40 PM EST
Migrating animals 'live fast and die young'
University of Exeter

Animals that migrate "live fast and die young", new research shows.

Released: 10-Nov-2020 8:50 AM EST
Urban gulls adapt foraging schedule to human activity patterns
University of Bristol

If you’ve ever seen a seagull snatch some fries or felt their beady eyes on your sandwich in the park, you'd be right to suspect they know exactly when to strike to increase their chances of getting a human snack. A new study by the University of Bristol is the most in-depth look to date at the foraging behaviours of urban gulls and how they’ve adapted to patterns of human activity in a city.

Released: 6-Nov-2020 4:50 PM EST
Migration and Molt Affect How Birds Change Their Colors
Michigan Technological University

Before the journey, many birds molt their bright feathers, replacing them with a more subdued palette. Watching this molt led scientists to wonder how feather color changes relate to the migrations many birds undertake twice each year.

Released: 3-Nov-2020 9:00 PM EST
Study Provides First Evidence of a Relationship between a Bird’s Gut and its Brain
Florida Atlantic University

A study of the relationships between cognition and the gut microbiome of captive zebra finches showed that their gut microbiome characteristics were related to performance on a cognitive assay where they learned a novel foraging technique. Researchers also identified potentially critical bacteria that were relatively more abundant in birds that performed better on this assay. This correlation provides some of the first evidence of a relationship between a bird's gut microbiome and its brain.

Released: 2-Nov-2020 12:35 PM EST
Birdwatching from afar: amazing new AI-enabled camera system to target specific behaviors
Osaka University

A research team from Osaka University has developed an innovative new animal-borne data-collection system that, guided by artificial intelligence (AI), has led to the witnessing of previously unreported foraging behaviors in seabirds.

Released: 29-Oct-2020 11:10 AM EDT
Antarctica yields oldest fossils of giant birds with 21-foot wingspans
University of California, Berkeley

Fossils recovered from Antarctica in the 1980s represent the oldest giant members of an extinct group of birds that patrolled the southern oceans with wingspans of up to 21 feet that would dwarf the 11½-foot wingspan of today's largest bird, the wandering albatross.

Released: 27-Oct-2020 2:05 PM EDT
Study: Most Migratory Birds Rely On a Greening World
Cornell University

A new study from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology confirms that most birds—but not all—synchronize their migratory movements with seasonal changes in vegetation greenness. This is the first study of its kind to cover the Western Hemisphere during the year-long life cycle of North American migratory birds that feed on vegetation, seeds, nectar, insects, or meat.

Released: 23-Oct-2020 8:20 AM EDT
New study the first to link plastic ingestion and dietary metals in seabirds
University of South Australia

A new study by Australian scientists is the first to find a relationship between plastic debris ingested by seabirds and liver concentrations of mineral metals, with potential links to pollution and nutrition.

15-Oct-2020 9:55 AM EDT
Lily the barn owl reveals how birds fly in gusty winds
University of Bristol

Scientists from the University of Bristol and the Royal Veterinary College have discovered how birds are able to fly in gusty conditions – findings that could inform the development of bio-inspired small-scale aircraft.

Released: 16-Oct-2020 12:25 PM EDT
World’s greatest mass extinction triggered switch to warm-bloodedness
University of Bristol

Mammals and birds today are warm-blooded, and this is often taken as the reason for their great success.

Released: 15-Oct-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Impact of Mercury on North American Songbirds
Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI)

Fifteen papers have recently been published in a special issue of the journal Ecotoxicology. Findings: at least 58 songbird species show demonstrated effects from mercury. The journal’s October 2020 issue presents results of field, laboratory, and museum studies—from Alaska to Maine to Puerto Rico.

Released: 14-Oct-2020 3:30 PM EDT
Mapping out rest stops for migrating birds
University of Delaware

Researchers have developed a new metric called the stopover-to-passage ratio that can help determine if a majority of birds are flying over a particular site or stopping at the site to refuel or rest. This can have important implications for what is done on the ground to help migratory birds.

Released: 6-Oct-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Birds Risk Starvation Trying to “Keep Pace” With Climate Change
Cornell University

Surviving on a warming planet can be a matter of timing—but simply shifting lifecycle stages to match the tempo of climate change has hidden dangers for some animals, according to new research from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour and Cornell University.

Released: 29-Sep-2020 12:15 PM EDT
Migrations research highlights human impacts on environment
Cornell University

Cornell University ecologists Aaron Rice and Amanda Rodewald are part of a cross-disciplinary effort to understand how human impacts and activities affect animals – from small birds to the largest whales – and the ecosystems we all share.

Released: 16-Sep-2020 4:15 PM EDT
Join Online Events to Celebrate Bird Migration
Cornell University

Day and night, across the country right now, a river of migrating birds is flowing overhead. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology holds its Migration Celebration to take note of this remarkable natural phenomenon. This year, Migration Celebration is taking place virtually with two weeks of special online events, including articles, activities, and live events.

Released: 15-Sep-2020 5:05 PM EDT
Sharp attention explains why the early bird gets the worm
University at Buffalo

Many of the characteristics related to auditory attention in birds match those of humans, according to a study from the University at Buffalo. The findings published in the journal PLOS ONE provide novel insights into evolutionary survival mechanisms, and are the first to behaviorally measure the cognitive process responsible for a non-human animal’s ability to segregate and respond to meaningful targets heard in simultaneous sound streams.

Released: 31-Aug-2020 8:30 AM EDT
Hot Dogs, Chicken Wings and City Living Helped Wetland Wood Storks Thrive
Florida Atlantic University

Using the Wood Stork, researchers compared city storks with natural wetland storks to gauge their success in urban environments based on their diet and food opportunities. Results provide evidence of how a wetland species persists and even thrives in an urban environment by switching to human foods like chicken wings and hots dogs when natural marshes are in bad shape. These findings indicate that urban areas can buffer a species from the unpredictability of natural food sources.

Released: 21-Aug-2020 12:30 PM EDT
Understanding how birds respond to extreme weather can inform conservation efforts
University of Wisconsin–Madison

How do different bird species respond to extreme weather events that occur for different amounts of time, ranging from weekly events like heat waves to seasonal events like drought? And how do traits unique to different species — for example, how far they migrate or how commonly they occur — predict their vulnerability to extreme weather?

Released: 21-Aug-2020 8:25 AM EDT
Meet the hedge fund managers of avian world
Washington University in St. Louis

In uncertain times, it makes sense to manage risk in your endeavors — whether it’s investing in money-making opportunities or deciding where to lay your eggs. Brood parasites are birds that are known to lay their eggs in other birds’ nests. Cowbirds and cuckoos are among the most famous examples of this group.

Released: 19-Aug-2020 12:05 PM EDT
Plastic debris releases potentially harmful chemicals into seabird stomach fluid
Frontiers

Plastic waste in the ocean is an increasing problem for wildlife, including seabirds who frequently mistake it for food.

17-Aug-2020 4:45 PM EDT
Bird skull evolution slowed after the extinction of the dinosaurs
PLOS

From emus to woodpeckers, modern birds show remarkable diversity in skull shape and size, often hypothesized to be the result of a sudden hastening of evolution following the mass extinction that killed their non-avian dinosaur cousins at the end of the Cretaceous 66 million years ago.

Released: 13-Aug-2020 1:20 PM EDT
Some dinosaurs could fly before they were birds
McGill University

New research using the most comprehensive study of feathered dinosaurs and early birds has revised the evolutionary relationships of dinosaurs at the origin of birds.

Released: 13-Aug-2020 10:40 AM EDT
Bird and reptile tears aren't so different from human tears
Frontiers

Bird and reptile tears aren't so unlike our own, shows a new study in Frontiers in Veterinary Science.

Released: 3-Aug-2020 8:55 AM EDT
Study: Oriole Hybridization Is a Dead End
Cornell University

A half-century of controversy over two popular bird species may have finally come to an end. In one corner: the Bullock's Oriole, found in the western half of North America. In the other corner: the Baltimore Oriole, breeding in the eastern half. Where their ranges meet in the Great Plains, the two mix freely and produce apparently healthy hybrid offspring. But according to scientists from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, hybridization is a dead end and both parent species will remain separate.

Released: 28-Jul-2020 4:30 PM EDT
For rufous hummingbirds, migration looks different depending on age and sex
Oregon State University

Plucky, beautiful and declining in numbers at about a 2% annual rate, the rufous hummingbird makes its long annual migration in different timing and route patterns based the birds' age and sex, new research by Oregon State University shows.

Released: 20-Jul-2020 5:25 PM EDT
Experts' high-flying study reveals secrets of soaring birds
Swansea University

New research has revealed when it comes to flying the largest of birds don't rely on flapping to move around. Instead they make use of air currents to keep them airborne for hours at a time.

Released: 20-Jul-2020 2:20 PM EDT
If It’s Big Enough and Leafy Enough the Birds Will Come
Cornell University

A new study from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology highlights specific features of urban green spaces that support the greatest diversity of bird species. The findings were published today in the journal Landscape and Urban Planning. The study focuses specifically on parks in New York City. It uses observations submitted to the eBird citizen-science database from 2002 through 2019 to estimate the variety of species found on an annual and seasonal basis. Bottom line: the more green space available, the greater the diversity of birds. Models show that Increasing the area of green space by 50% would result in an 11.5% increase in annual and an 8.2% increase in seasonal species diversity.

Released: 17-Jul-2020 6:25 PM EDT
Antarctica more widely impacted by humans than previously thought
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg

Antarctica is considered one of the Earth's largest, most pristine remaining wildernesses. Yet since its formal discovery 200 years ago, the continent has seen accelerating and potentially impactful human activity.

Released: 16-Jul-2020 4:40 PM EDT
Antarctica more widely impacted than previously thought
Monash University

Antarctica is considered one of the Earth's largest, most pristine remaining wildernesses. Yet since its formal discovery 200 years ago, the continent has seen accelerating and potentially impactful human activity.

Released: 8-Jul-2020 2:05 PM EDT
Biodiversity Research Institute Announces First Successful Loon Nesting in Southern Massachusetts in a Century
Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI)

Biodiversity Research Institute announces the successful results of its long-term loon translocation and restoration project Restore the Call: A male loon chick that was translocated in 2015 from New York to Massachusetts returned in 2018 to the region from which it fledged, and now has formed a territorial pair, nested, and successfully hatched a chick in Fall River, Massachusetts.

Released: 7-Jul-2020 1:20 PM EDT
Community science birding data does not yet capture global bird trends
University of Utah

Ornithologists at the University of Utah say that community science bird data shows different trends in bird populations than professional bird surveys do, especially in developing countries. More observations are needed, the researchers say, both by birders and professionals.

Released: 24-Jun-2020 11:05 AM EDT
Large boreal peatland complexes near their southern range limit are likely threatened by warmer climate
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

In the Adirondacks, the black spruce, tamarack, and other boreal species are being overcome by trees normally found in warmer, more temperate forests. These invaders could overtake a variety of northern species, eliminating trees that have long been characteristic of Adirondack wetlands.

Released: 22-Jun-2020 12:55 PM EDT
Protecting natural forest in oil palm plantations crucial for conservation
University of York

Forest conservation areas in oil palm plantations play a vital role in storing carbon and boosting rainforest biodiversity, a new study on palm oil agriculture in Borneo has revealed.

Released: 16-Jun-2020 1:40 PM EDT
Wildfires cause bird songs to change
Oxford University Press

A new study in The Auk: Ornithological Advances, published by Oxford University Press, suggests that wildfires change the types of songs sung by birds living in nearby forests.



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