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Migration Awareness 3

This morning Arthur and I are walking our Rescue & Recovery route to look for fallen injured or dead birds that have struck buildings in Chicago during the night and early morning. This is our sixth week volunteering for R&R this spring. During these weeks, I’d like to highlight some of the perils birds face on their migration by sharing a website or information about migratory birds.

This week I’m sharing a list of 10 Ways People Can Help Birds This Spring. Check out the list and please do what you can to help birds!

Yellow Warbler
Migrants like this Yellow Warbler are on the move! Yellow Warbler by Kelly Colgan Azar, Creative Commons on Flickr

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Migration Awareness 2

This morning Arthur and I are walking our Rescue & Recovery route to look for fallen injured or dead birds that have struck buildings in Chicago during the night and early morning. This is our fifth week volunteering for R&R this spring. During these weeks, I’d like to highlight some of the perils birds face on their migration by sharing a website or information about migratory birds.

FLAP is the Fatal Light Awareness Program, based in Toronto. Their mission: Working to safeguard migratory birds in the urban environment through education, research, rescue and rehabilitation. FLAP volunteers perform R&R in Toronto during migration. The FLAP website provides a wealth of information on preventing bird strikes in general, as well as specific data on the bird-strike situation in Toronto. For example, there is a list of the Top 30 Most Lethal Structures for Bird Collisions in the city. Similar data on the situation in Chicago is also recorded, but I don’t believe it is made public, generally. At Birding America earlier this year we did attend a seminar about the perils of migrating through Chicago, where some of this data was shared. I would like to see it publicized; perhaps some of the worst offenders would be motivated to make bird-friendly adjustments to their buildings.

To raise awareness, FLAP released a booklet last year entitled A Field Guide to Common Birds of Toronto.

The booklet, which is available electronically and can be downloaded here, shows 10 of the more common window-strike victims of the city. They are shown as they would be when found dead on the ground, with field markings and collision information for the species.

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Migration Awareness 1

This morning Arthur and I are walking our Rescue & Recovery route to look for fallen injured or dead birds that have struck buildings in Chicago during the night and early morning. This is our fourth week volunteering for R&R this spring.

Birders know that spring migration is starting to heat up, with reports of new arrivals appearing on state birding listservs on a daily basis. Because of our volunteer work I’ve been thinking a lot about migration and the amazing and dangerous journey so many of our feathered friends make each spring and fall. I’d like to highlight some of the perils birds face on their migration by sharing a website or information about migratory birds each week while we are volunteering this spring.

The American Bird Conservancy recently issued a new online brochure called How to Prevent Birds from Colliding with Home Windows/Doors. Bird strikes don’t just occur on metropolitan skyscrapers – the windows on your home could also pose a threat to birds. The brochure is a two-sided sheet with general bird-strike information on the front and five practical tips on the back.

You, my birding friends, are probably aware of what you can do to prevent bird strikes at your home. But what about your friends and family – the ones that aren’t birders? This printable brochure would be great to share with someone who might not think of the birds as we do.

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Raptor Internship Week 12

Last Tuesday was the final day of the Raptor Internship I took at Flint Creek Wildlife Rehabilitation this spring. After 11 weeks of lecture, study and handling work, we spent the first part of week 12 taking our 150-question test and practical examination. After passing the practical portion we were able to take a walk with Old Red, FCWR’s wise old Red-tailed Hawk, on our own. This was the first time we were able to walk solo with a such a big bird. She was magnificent! I did get a few photos during the day, but not of raptors – and I’m saving them for a future post on a different subject. Instead, here is a collection of some photos taken throughout the internship.

During the second week we learned about equipment and put together our own falconry gloves. I was distracted by Meepy, who I could see from my classroom chair.


Meepy resting in her mew

In week 4 we worked with the equipment and got to practice removing and applying equipment with Pip, a Barn Owl with a lot of character.


Posing with Pip after the exercise

In week 5 I went to take Meepy out of her mew. This was the first time I took a bird onto my glove. Luckily there was a student reporter in our class with us who documented it (and my awkwardness) in photos.


Meepy thinks about getting on my glove

In week 6 we got to work with Junior for the first time. I was happy to have another stroll with Meepy, too.


Junior and me


Meepy and me

In week 7 I got to walk with a bird on my own for the first time. Darwin the American Kestrel was a perfect gentleman.


Darwin and me

During week 9 I was lucky enough to get to hold a Red-tailed Hawk for the first time. 0511 was a bit restless. I love this photo, even though it’s blurry. I’ve got a look of surprise on my face – I’m feeling 0511’s strong talons on my hand. You can see Dawn, behind us, has a big smile on her face. She’s laughing at my reaction to 0511’s incredible strength.


0511 and me, with Dawn in the background

In week 10 I got to hold Meepy while she was having her beak coped. Later I held FCWR’s longtime resident Old Red.


Meepy and me after the deed


Old Red and me

I enjoyed the internship so much and I’m really sad it’s over. I highly recommend the Raptor Internship! Before it began I wasn’t sure if I wanted to do it and I was late signing up, but I’m so glad I did.

Along with Arthur I’m volunteering with Rescue & Recovery during the spring migration. I hope to continue volunteering at FCWR going forward and I’m sure you’ll hear all about it here on the blog!

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R&R in Chicago

On Thursday Arthur and I are volunteering for Flint Creek Wildlife Rehabilitation’s Migration Rescue & Recovery. Each morning during the spring and fall migration period, volunteers look for injured fallen birds who have struck buildings in downtown Chicago. Birds rescued by FCWR volunteers are treated at the Northerly Island bird hospital. Salvages are brought to the Field Museum.


A bit of Chicago before sunrise

From the FCWR Blog:

Thousands of birds strike glass on Chicago’s many buildings during their twice-yearly migration through the city. These stunned birds fall to the ground where they lie unconscious. Without intervention, they are stepped on by unaware pedestrians, eaten by hungry gulls or die a slow death without the benefit of medical treatment. These birds include many beautiful warblers, woodpeckers, thrushes and buntings, among others. Last year [2007], an amazing 90% of birds that arrive for treatment at our Northerly Island facility recover and can be released back to the wild. Timely treatment is important to survival rates and rescue teams ensure that birds can be treated by our trained staff at Northerly Island where they will have their best chance of survival.


Finding a safe and legal parking space is about the only hazard we face

Earlier this month at Birding America we attended a lecture by Dave Willard where we learned a lot about the hazards of migration through Chicago’s urban environment. The number of birds that are killed from window strikes each year is incredible.

The Rescue & Recovery we are doing takes place early in the morning, to save or salvage nighttime migrant birds that have struck the buildings before sunrise. According to the American Bird Conservancy, the intrusion of light into migratory bird flyways poses added danger to an already perilous journey. The interior and exterior lights on tall buildings and bright uplights used for decorative illumination of monuments, government offices, parking garages, and other structures of all heights, emit light fields that can entrap birds. The birds are reluctant to fly from a well lit area to a dark one, particularly during periods of low cloud cover or inclement weather when views of the stars and moon, which serve as navigational aids, are obstructed.

So turning off the lights helps. It helps a lot. A study done at Chicago’s McCormick Place convention building found that turning lights off reduced bird deaths by up to 88%. For all the days counted, 1297 birds died from hitting lit windows while only 192 birds died from hitting dark windows (either because the lights were out or heavy drapes were drawn). After adjusting for the variance in lit versus dark windows, the overall reduction was 83%.

Programs like Lights Out Toronto, Smart Lights/Safe Flights in Cleveland, Lights Out Chicago, and several other lights out programs across the U.S. encourage building managers to dim their lights during the spring and fall migration period. Besides saving lives, turning off the lights is good for the environment and saves money on energy costs. That’s why I don’t really understand or support the Earth Hour initiative. A global campaign to switch of lights anytime they aren’t needed – like in all office buildings outside of working hours – would make more sense to me.

As awareness about the hazards to birds caused by buildings increases, programs like WindowCollisions.info and Birds and Buildings are able to educate and work with the public and an increasing number of firms to make modern construction safer for our avian friends. Birds and Buildings works “to educate members of the building industry […] about the design practices that send the wrong signals to birds, the signals that tell birds it is safe to fly into a window.”

Despite the Lights Out programs and expanding knowledge on bird-safe construction practices, bird strikes still occur. Not all of the birds die in the initial strike. Rescue & Recovery aims to collect stunned and injured birds and get them to care as soon as possible. Most rescued birds can be released the same day they were picked up. Yesterday we got good news about a Brown Creeper that was picked up on our morning route – released. Good luck, little creeper!

Brown Creeper, 4-2010, NJ
Brown Creeper, 4-2010, NJ by Kelly Colgan Azar, Creative Commons on Flickr

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Posted in FCWR, Migration | 2 Comments

Exterminators Stick Pigeons To Store Sign

Last week rescue crews worked to save about a dozen pigeons from a store sign in Wethersfield, Connecticut after they became stuck. The store had employed a pest control company to keep birds from roosting in their sign. A gel was applied to the sign in order to repel pigeons. When the temperature outside dropped, however, the gel became adhesive and pigeons became affixed to the sign. The birds were in the care of animal control and were expected to make a full recovery. You can read the full story Crews Rescue Stuck Pigeons at WFSB.

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Posted in Aside, North America, Offbeat, Pigeons!, Rehabilitation | 2 Comments