4.1 Article

Fall bird migration in western North America during a period of heightened wildfire activity

Journal

AVIAN CONSERVATION AND ECOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
DOI: 10.5751/ACE-2339-170243

Keywords

avian abundance; bird banding; body condition; climate change; emaciation; lag effect; movement ecology; mortality; ornithology

Funding

  1. Hamit Batubay Ozkan Conservation Ecology Graduate Fellowship
  2. Barbara J. Watkins Environmental Studies Graduate Fellowship
  3. University of Utah Global Change and Sustainability Center

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This study assessed the potential impacts of wildfires on fall bird migration over the past decade and found a positive correlation between acres burned by wildfires and the number of bird captures, as well as a negative correlation with bird body mass index. The study also considered the lag effects of wildfires on bird migration and evaluated the usefulness of different proxies of body condition in highly stressed land birds.
Billions of birds annually migrate between breeding and nonbreeding grounds in North America. During fall 2020, there was a series of alarming mass-mortality events of migratory birds across the western United States, with estimates of 100,000 to 1 million birds having perished. One potential culprit behind these die-offs is wildfires, though there has been little research documenting the indirect effects of wildfires on actively migrating birds. We undertook a multi-year assessment of potential impacts that wildfires may have had on fall bird migration over the past decade, with a particular focus on fall 2020, using systematic bird banding data from southeastern Utah. We used a correlative approach to evaluate the relationship between estimates of acres burned by wildfires in western North America on several variables representing bird abundance and body condition. Notably, in our best fit models of birds banded at our research site during fall 2020, we found both a positive relationship for the number of bird captures and a negative relationship for body mass index with more daily burned acres. We provide an examination of incorporating lag effects of wildfires on different metrics of bird migration to account for potential impacts of fires on birds before migration and banding. Additionally, we assess the usefulness of different proxies of body condition in highly stressed land birds and introduce a scale for scoring emaciation of birds in the hand while banding. Our insights into avian migration ecology are one of the few studies that explore the role wildfires may have had in affecting migratory bird movements and health.

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