4.1 Article

Seasonal variation in drivers of bird-window collisions on the west coast of British Columbia, Canada

Journal

AVIAN CONSERVATION AND ECOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

Resilience Alliance
DOI: 10.5751/ACE-02482-180215

Keywords

bird-window collisions; building; collision risk factors; facade; seasonal variation; urban bird conservation; vegetation

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This study examined the effects of building and vegetation features on bird-window collision risk at a coastal campus. The results showed that glass area and the number of stories reflecting vegetation were important factors affecting collision probability, and different seasons had different impacts on collision risk.
We examined the effects of fasade-level building and vegetation features on bird-window collision risk, and how these effects varied across seasons at a Pacific coastal campus with mild winters, abundant evergreen vegetation, and seasonally varied bird communities. We searched for bird carcasses at 57 fasades of 8 buildings at the University of British Columbia (UBC) over 155 days between January 2015 and March 2017 (total: 8835 fasade surveys). Collision monitoring occurred across five equal sampling periods that represented stages of the annual cycle of the bird community, including the fall and spring migratory periods, the breeding season, and the long overwintering period. For each season, we compared logistic regression models predicting the odds of a collision from different sets of fasade and vegetation characteristics expected to influence collisions: fasade area, area of glass, porous surface cover (ground and shrub vegetation, soil, leaf litter), tree cover, and the number of building stories reflecting vegetation. Consistent with other studies, area of glass had a positive influence on collision probability in all seasons; however, the effect was strongest during the fall migratory period, when daily collision mortality rates peaked at UBC. The number of stories reflecting vegetation also increased collision probability, but only in the fall, indicating that the vertical extent of vegetation and reflective glass may affect collision risk differently as bird communities change across seasons. Fasade area increased collision probability only in the winter (a long and lethal period for bird collisions at UBC), reflecting different risk factors associated with the species most vulnerable to collisions in this season. Our results highlight the need to measure building and vegetation effects across the longest and most lethal stages of the annual cycle of birds, both to predict the impact of proposed buildings and to prioritize mitigation strategies that will result in the greatest conservation benefits.

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