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[TN-Bird] Think you're seeing the same bird over and over? (Florida)
- From: Greg Williams <k4hsm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 24 Jun 2007 21:36:47 -0400
Story out of Florida, thought it might be of interest.
Greg
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/06/24/Pasco/Think_you_re_seeing_t.shtml
NEW PORT RICHEY - Ken Tracey tallied the plump, off-white birds perched
on utility lines as he drove through a neighborhood in southwestern
Pasco County.
"Collared-dove, " said Tracey, president of the West Pasco Audubon
Society. "Mourning dove with a collared-dove right above it ...
collared-dove ... another collared-dove."
So he saw plenty of birds, but mostly the same kind of bird, the
Eurasian collared-dove. A native of Eastern Europe, it established a
beachhead near New Port Richey 20 years ago, advanced across the
continent and became one of the most common nonmigratory species in Florida.
Along with a handful of other species - including American crows and
Canada geese - it has thrived because it can live comfortably among
humans and feed on their handouts, according to a recent study by the
National Audubon Society.
The populations of once common birds that live only in natural areas,
meanwhile, have plummeted, the study found. It identified 20 species
that have seen population declines of more than 50 percent in the past
40 years: pasture-dwelling Northern bobwhites, whippoorwills needing
open forests, clapper rails that prefer salt marshes.
Though none of these birds is in danger of extinction, said the author's
study, Greg Butcher, their dwindling numbers mean the same for bird life
in the United States and Florida that it does for our landscape: more
uniformity, less color and variety.
"In a way, it's the Wal-Martization of the American skies, " Butcher said.
* * *
Previous studies of bird populations depended mostly on the U.S.
Geological Survey's annual breeding survey, conducted from the same
roadside posts around the country every spring. Butcher's report is the
first to combine these numbers with 40 years of records from Audubon's
annual Christmas Bird Count, which tallies birds and species of birds
after their fall migration.
The Christmas counts are not scientific surveys, but the database is
valuable because it is so large. It's "50, 000 people reporting what
they are seeing year after year, " Butcher said.
Also, it points to the same conclusion as the breeding census: The
nation is losing vast numbers of birds - about 432-million among the 20
common declining species - and from every type of habitat.
Northern pintail ducks breed in "America's duck factory, " Butcher said,
the small lakes and ponds in Canada and the northern United States.
These have been drained to make room for wheat and corn fields, he said,
and the pintail population has dropped 77 percent in the United States
and 96 percent in Florida since 1967.
Another duck species in decline, the greater scaup, summers in tundra
degraded by global warming. The black skimmer's population has fallen
because the birds nest on increasingly crowded Florida beaches.
Pasture species seem especially vulnerable, Butcher said. Pesticides and
herbicides have killed the insects and weeds these birds eat. Frequent
mowing leaves them without enough time to raise their brood, Butcher
said, and "a lot of eastern meadowlark nests get cut down while they are
still full of either eggs or young."
"These grassland habitats are much easier to develop in a variety of
ways, " he said. "It goes to intensive agricultural uses and a lot of it
goes to suburban development."
In one of the fastest growing parts of west-central Florida, southern
Pasco County west of the Suncoast Parkway, you can almost see it happen.
"I just heard a bobwhite quail, " Tracey said, listening through an open
window as he pulled off State Road 54 and parked next to a weedy,
20-acre pasture.
Stepping out of his minivan, he spotted two more birds on the Audubon's
list of declining species: a loggerhead shrike that scanned the meadow
for grasshoppers to impale with its beak and a meadowlark on a fence
post that turned its head, showing off its bright-yellow neck.
But Tracey also pointed out the two subdivisions and the cemetery
bordering the field.
"You can see how crammed in this is, " he said. "This is not going to be
overgrown pasture much longer."
* * *
This kind of growth means the national trend toward declining bird
populations is especially pronounced in Florida, Butcher said.
"The development pressures are just so much stronger there than in the
rest of the country."
The numbers of many of the 20 common species in decline across the
United States have dropped even more dramatically in Florida. The survey
identified 49 species in Florida with population losses of more than 50
percent.
Even the good news about birds in Florida is tainted. The rufous
hummingbird, in steep decline nationally, has made astounding gains in
Florida, with its migratory population climbing about 700 times since
1967, according to bird count statistics.
This, however, is due to deforestation in Mexico, the bird's historic
migration grounds, and global warming that allows the birds to winter on
the Gulf Coast.
Finally, the state is home to the survey's most unwanted success story,
the Eurasian collared-dove.
The species arrived in Florida after a few were released in the Bahamas
in 1972, said Bill Pranty, a biologist with the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission and one of the state's most
accomplished birders.
Though the species first came to the state in the late 1970s, the first
documented sightings during Christmas counts came in 1986 in Key Largo
and near New Port Richey.
"I remember finding them with my friend and we said, these are not
ringed turtle-doves, these are collared-doves, " said Pranty, who saw
the birds in a small coastal neighborhood, Baillie's Bluff, a few days
before the count.
"We were sort of surprised, but interested to see them in Pasco County."
Collared-doves are no longer a novelty, with 270 tallied in the 2006
West Pasco Christmas count compared to 29 common ground-doves, a native
species. Though Pranty has seen no evidence that the collared-doves have
displaced other birds, their rapid spread has made them "a symbol of how
humans have altered habitat, " Butcher said.
"They have sort of a mournful, three note call ... What I think of is:
'No hope, duuude. No hope, duuude.' "
* * *
If there is hope, it is in the resiliency of birds. Small changes in
their habitats and humans' habits can stem these declines or begin to
restore their populations.
Black skimmer mothers do not warm their eggs during hot days, they shade
them, said Julie Wraithmell, wildlife policy coordinator for Audubon of
Florida, and teaching people to stay clear of nesting birds could save
thousands of young.
"People need to know that eggs can cook in the Florida sun very quickly,
so some of these disturbance events are catastrophic for entire
colonies, " she said.
Bev Hansen, an avid birder from Hernando County, has noticed a side
benefit of the controlled burns intended to benefit endangered
red-cockaded woodpeckers in Withlacoochee State Forest.
Native wire grass has flourished, Hansen said, "and now I hear bobwhites
all the time."
Even the spread of the collared-doves has contributed to the rise of a
distinctive predatory species.
"There goes a Cooper's hawk looking for a collared-dove, " Tracey said,
watching the small hawk skimming above a mangrove forest just north of
Baillie's Bluff.
"That's one good thing. The Cooper's hawk population has gone up 10
times because of the collared-doves."
Dan DeWitt can be reached at dewitt@xxxxxxxxxxx or (352) 754-6116.
On the rise
These birds have thrived between 1967 and 2007, the period studied in a
recent National Audubon Society population survey of U.S. birds.
AMERICAN CROW
Black plumage and beak. Florida: 5 percent decrease; U.S.: 1, 300
percent increase. Keys to survival: able to thrive in both agricultural
and urban areas, eating nuts, seeds, garbage and carrion.
CANADA GOOSE
Large, long-necked goose with white breast patch. Florida: 418 percent
increase; U.S. 1, 500 percent increase. Keys to survival: benefited by
widespread restoration efforts. The birds will eat corn and bread crumbs
from humans and live in artificial lakes and ponds.
DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT
Large, dark waterbird with a long, hooked bill. Florida: breeding
population is stable, migratory population increased by 239 percent.
U.S.: increased 2, 100 percent. Like the bald eagle, they have emerged
from near extinction caused by DDT and eat a wide variety of fish species.
EURASIAN COLLARED-DOVE
Pale tan and gray coloring with a black collar. Increase in Florida and
U.S.: After migrating to the United States in the 1970s, collared-doves
have become one of the most common nonmigratory birds in Florida and
have spread to more than 20 states, including California. Key to
survival: prefers to perch on utility lines and poles; eats seed from
feeders and weedy lots.
On the decline
The following birds are among the 20 species with populations that have
dropped more than 50 percent in the past 40 years.
EASTERN MEADOWLARK
Robin-sized bird with light-brown back and brilliant yellow breast.
U.S.: declined 72 percent; Florida: declined 90 percent. Key to falling
population: loss of grassland habitat due to development and intensive
agricultural practices.
NORTHERN PINTAIL
Mallard-sized duck with a slim body found in grassy uplands and untilled
cropland. U.S.: declined 77 percent; Florida: declined 96 percent. Key
to falling population: draining of small ponds in northern U.S. and
Canada and warmer northern winters that mean fewer ducks migrate to Florida.
NORTHERN BOBWHITE
Chubby, robin-sized quail found in grasslands mixed with shrubs. U.S.:
declined 82 percent; Florida: declined 96 percent. Key to falling
population: loss of grasslands and replacement of native grasses with
imported species.
LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE
A songbird with black wings and a light-colored chest that hunts large
insects, mice and even other small birds. U.S.: declined 71 percent.
Florida: Breeding population has declined 82 percent, migratory
population by 43 percent. Key to falling population: decline of pasture
habitat.
--
Greg Williams
K4HSM
k4hsm@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.twiar.org
http://www.etskywarn.net
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