Birding Wire

Study: Climate Change Could Impact Critical Food Supplies for Migratory Birds

Ithaca, NY--Climate change could disrupt a critical fueling-up stage for migratory birds just as they’re preparing to depart on their autumn journeys to Central America, according to research published in the journal Ecology Letters.
 

Scarlet Tanager
The Scarlet Tanager is one of the species whose food supply could be impact by projected changes in climate. Photo by Marshall Iliff. Download image.

Cornell Lab of Ornithology research ecologist Frank La Sorte developed computer models of predicted changes in climate for every week of the year in the Western Hemisphere. These models were then overlaid with weekly estimates of abundance for 77 migratory bird species that fly between breeding grounds in North America and non-breeding grounds in Mexico and Central America. La Sorte used bird observations from the eBird citizen-science database, an online program run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
 
La Sorte's research pinpointed a period in late summer in the temperate zone of North America when the climate is projected to be significantly different from the historical norm. That change in climate, La Sorte says, could affect insect and plant communities, which in turn would threaten food resources for migratory birds during the crucial stage when they’re bulking up and layering on fat reserves to fuel their autumn migration journey.
 
Most at-risk, La Sorte says, would be eastern migratory birds that fly greater distances and require large fuel reserves, and the juvenile birds that just hatched a few months earlier and are undertaking their first migration—a hazardous journey that can be extremely energetically taxing.
 

climate change model map
"Hotter" colors (red to yellow) on the map indicate a climate that will significantly change by 2100 compared to previous conditions during the last week of August.Download graphic.

"Using bird observations from eBird, our study provides an unprecedented level of spatial and temporal detail, allowing us to identify locations and times when migratory bird populations may be at particular risk under future climate change," said La Sorte. "This information is important because it advances our understanding of the unique challenges migratory birds are likely to face in the future, and where and when the application of conservation efforts may achieve the greatest benefits."
 

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Source: Seasonal associations with novel climates for North American migratory bird populations. Ecology Letters, April 2018. Note: The article will be published online on April 4. To get a PDF of the study ahead of time, email Pat, below.

Media Contact:
Pat Leonard, (607) 254-2137, pel27@cornell.edu