Bye-bye, birdie: Study finds North American birds getting smaller
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[December 13, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Since 1978,
researchers have scooped up and measured tens of thousands of birds that
died after crashing into buildings in Chicago during spring and fall
migrations. Their work has documented what might be called the
incredible shrinking bird.
A study published on Wednesday involving 70,716 birds killed from 1978
through 2016 in such collisions in the third-largest U.S. city found
that their average body sizes steadily declined over that time, though
their wingspans increased.
The results suggest that a warming climate is driving down the size of
certain bird species in North America and perhaps around the world, the
researchers said. They cited a phenomenon called Bergmann's rule, in
which individuals within a species tend to be smaller in warmer regions
and larger in colder regions, as reason to believe that species may
become smaller over time as temperatures rise.
The study focused on 52 species - mostly songbirds dominated by various
sparrows, warblers and thrushes - that breed in cold regions of North
America and spend their winters in locations south of Chicago. The
researchers measured and weighed a parade of birds that crashed into
building windows and went splat onto the ground.
Over the four decades, body size decreased in all 52 species. The
average body mass fell by 2.6%. Leg bone length dropped by 2.4%. The
wingspans increased by 1.3%, possibly to enable the species to continue
to make long migrations even with smaller bodies.
"In other words, climate change seems to be changing both the size and
shape of these species," said biologist Brian Weeks of the University of
Michigan's School for Environment and Sustainability, lead author of the
study published in the journal Ecology Letters.
"Virtually everyone agrees that the climate is warming, but examples of
just how that is affecting the natural world are only now coming to
light," added Dave Willard, collections manager emeritus at the Field
Museum in Chicago who measured all the birds.
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Some of the thousands of birds in the collection of the Field Museum
in Chicago, that collided with city buildings, are pictured in this
photo released on December 4, 2019. Field Museum/Ben Marks/ Handout
via REUTERS
The study provides fresh evidence of worrisome trends for North
American birds. A study published in September documented a 29%
avian population drop in the United States and Canada since 1970 and
a net loss of about 2.9 billion birds.
"I think the message to take away is this," Weeks said. "As humans
change the world at an unprecedented rate and scale, there are
likely widespread and consistent biotic responses to environmental
change."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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