We cannot throw tons of toxins on to the soil and expect birds to be unaffected. Poisoned insects do and plants not make a great feed. We also have the deleterious effects of Roundup on the whole environmental chain itself.
Throw in the complete elimination of hedgerows and we have a loss of a convenient habitat as well sending the birds to distant woodlands were the cover is much different.
I have also noticed that the urban populations are robust as well. This surely reflects the low toxicity of the plant environment.
New Study Finds U.S. and Canada Have Lost More Than One in Four Birds in the Past 50 Years
Data
show that since 1970, the U.S. and Canada have lost nearly 3 billion
birds, a massive reduction in abundance involving hundreds of species,
from beloved backyard songbirds to long-distance migrants.
For digital press kit: https://cornell.app.box.com/v/3BillionBirds
September 19, 2019—A study published today in the journal Science
reveals that since 1970, bird populations in the United States and
Canada have declined by 29 percent, or almost 3 billion birds, signaling
a widespread ecological crisis. The results show tremendous losses
across diverse groups of birds and habitats—from iconic songsters such
as meadowlarks to long-distance migrants such as swallows and backyard
birds including sparrows.
"Multiple, independent lines of evidence show a massive reduction in the
abundance of birds," said Ken Rosenberg, the study’s lead author and a
senior scientist at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and American Bird
Conservancy. "We expected to see continuing declines of threatened
species. But for the first time, the results also showed pervasive
losses among common birds across all habitats, including backyard
birds."
The study notes that birds are indicators of environmental health,
signaling that natural systems across the U.S. and Canada are now being
so severely impacted by human activities that they no longer support the
same robust wildlife populations.
The findings show that of nearly 3 billion birds lost, 90 percent belong
to 12 bird families, including sparrows, warblers, finches, and
swallows—common, widespread species that play influential roles in food
webs and ecosystem functioning, from seed dispersal to pest control.
Among the steep declines noted:
- Grassland birds are especially hard hit, with a 53-percent reduction in population—more than 720 million birds—since 1970.
- Shorebirds, most of which frequent sensitive coastal habitats, were already at dangerously low numbers and have lost more than one-third of their population.
- The volume of spring migration, measured by radar in the night skies, has dropped by 14 percent in just the past decade.
"These data are consistent with what we’re seeing elsewhere with other
taxa showing massive declines, including insects and amphibians," said
coauthor Peter Marra, senior scientist emeritus and former head of the
Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center and now director of the Georgetown
Environment Initiative at Georgetown University. "It’s imperative to
address immediate and ongoing threats, both because the domino effects
can lead to the decay of ecosystems that humans depend on for our own
health and livelihoods—and because people all over the world cherish
birds in their own right. Can you imagine a world without birdsong?"
Evidence for the declines emerged from detection of migratory birds in
the air from 143 NEXRAD weather radar stations across the continent in a
period spanning over 10 years, as well as from nearly 50 years of data
collected through multiple monitoring efforts on the ground.
"Citizen-science participants contributed critical scientific data to
show the international scale of losses of birds," said coauthor John
Sauer of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). "Our results also provide
insights into actions we can take to reverse the declines." The analysis
included citizen-science data from the North American Breeding Bird
Survey coordinated by the USGS and the Canadian Wildlife Service—the
main sources of long-term, large-scale population data for North
American birds—the Audubon Christmas Bird Count, and Manomet’s
International Shorebird Survey.
Although the study did not analyze the causes of declines, it noted that
the steep drop in North American birds parallels the losses of birds
elsewhere in the world, suggesting multiple interacting causes that
reduce breeding success and increase mortality. It noted that the
largest factor driving these declines is likely the widespread loss and
degradation of habitat, especially due to agricultural intensification
and urbanization.
Other studies have documented mortality from predation by free-roaming
domestic cats; collisions with glass, buildings, and other structures;
and pervasive use of pesticides associated with widespread declines in
insects, an essential food source for birds. Climate change is expected
to compound these challenges by altering habitats and threatening plant
communities that birds need to survive. More research is needed to
pinpoint primary causes for declines in individual species.
"The story is not over," said coauthor Michael Parr, president of
American Bird Conservancy. "There are so many ways to help save birds.
Some require policy decisions such as strengthening the Migratory Bird
Treaty Act. We can also work to ban harmful pesticides and properly fund
effective bird conservation programs. Each of us can make a difference
with everyday actions that together can save the lives of millions of
birds—actions like making windows safer for birds, keeping cats indoors,
and protecting habitat."
The
study also documents a few promising rebounds resulting from galvanized
human efforts. Waterfowl (ducks, geese, and swans) have made a
remarkable recovery over the past 50 years, made possible by investments
in conservation by hunters and billions of dollars of government
funding for wetland protection and restoration. Raptors such as the Bald
Eagle have also made spectacular comebacks since the 1970s, after the
harmful pesticide DDT was banned and recovery efforts through endangered
species legislation in the U.S. and Canada provided critical
protection.
"It’s a wake-up call that we’ve lost more than a quarter of our birds in
the U.S. and Canada," said coauthor Adam Smith from Environment and
Climate Change Canada. "But the crisis reaches far beyond our individual
borders. Many of the birds that breed in Canadian backyards migrate
through or spend the winter in the U.S. and places farther south—from
Mexico and the Caribbean to Central and South America. What our birds
need now is an historic, hemispheric effort that unites people and
organizations with one common goal: bringing our birds back."
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