Bird–building collisions increase with weather conditions that favor nocturnal migration and with inclement and changing weather

Author:

Lao Sirena1ORCID,Anderson Abigail W2,Blair Robert B2,Eckles Joanna W34,Turner Reed J3,Loss Scott R1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Oklahoma State University , Stillwater, Oklahoma , USA

2. Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota , St. Paul, Minnesota , USA

3. Audubon Minnesota , St. Paul, Minnesota , USA

4. American Bird Conservancy , Washington, D.C. , USA

Abstract

Abstract Collisions with building windows are a top bird mortality source, but few studies have evaluated how bird–window collisions are influenced by weather. By monitoring collisions daily at 21 buildings in Minneapolis, Minnesota, over 4 migration seasons, we show that weather influences numbers of window collisions of nocturnal migrants in spring and fall, indicating that collisions may be forecastable based on weather conditions. Collisions increased with weather favoring migration, such as consecutive nights of south wind in spring and even short periods of north wind in fall. We also found evidence that spring and fall collisions increase with weather changes that impede migration, such as changes from fair conditions and tailwinds early in the night to headwinds near sunrise. Our study suggests complex weather effects never before considered in the context of bird collisions, including possible time lag effects of conditions 2–3 nights before collisions occur, effects of multi-day sequences of conditions, and interactions between conditions at different times of night. More research is needed to determine if the accuracy of weather-based collision prediction systems improves by integrating such nuances and to clarify mechanisms through which these complex effects operate, such as influences of weather on migration intensity and collision avoidance behavior. Weather-based forecasts may allow refinement of collision mitigation approaches (e.g., reducing building lighting on certain nights or using temporary glass coverings or treatments). However, because challenges remain to communicating such temporally targeted actions and implementing them in a timely manner, other bird-friendly practices (e.g., season-long lighting reduction and permanent glass treatments) should continue to be prioritized.

Funder

Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority and Minnesota Vikings

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference66 articles.

1. The role of weather variables and flight direction in determining the magnitude of nocturnal bird migration;Able;Ecology,1973

2. Wind selectivity of migratory flight departures in birds;Åkesson;Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology,2000

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