Exploring Hen Migration: Your Questions Answered


[Sarah Wagner] All proper, people. We’re virtually on the prime of the hour. We’ll get began in only a minute. If you wish to drop a be aware within the chat about the place you’re zooming in from or inform us on YouTube for those who’re watching there. It seems to be like we have now Tennessee, Boulder, Colorado, British Columbia, dwelling state of New York, Chicago, throughout. That is incredible. Of us are nonetheless piling in.

All proper, we’ll go forward and get began. Welcome to at present’s webinar from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology the place we’ll reply your entire chicken migration questions or at the very least as many as we will get to inside our brief hour we have now right here. My title is Sarah Wagner, and I’m the general public data specialist right here on the Customer Heart on the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. And I’ll be facilitating at present’s dialog.

With us at present is Kevin McGowan, who will probably be becoming a member of us in only a minute. However earlier than we get began, I’ve a number of fast bulletins I wish to make. For these of you who aren’t acquainted with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, we’re dwelling to a group of researchers and supporters from around the globe who admire birds and the integral roles they play in our ecosystems.

Our mission is to advance vanguard analysis, schooling, and citizen science that helps to resolve urgent conservation challenges. Immediately’s webinar is the conclusion of our two-week migration celebration, which is the lab’s largest on-line occasion yearly. You may try our migration assets and instruments that will help you higher take pleasure in and do your individual recording of what you’re seeing with migration on our web site.

So we’ll drop that hyperlink within the chat so you may see previous webinars from different migration celebrations and the few that we’ve carried out for this 12 months’s migration celebration. So verify these out. I’ve a few fast technical notes for the viewers after which we will get began. Closed captioning is out there on Zoom. For those who’d like to show captions on or off, please click on the captions button on the backside of your display.

For these of you on Zoom, click on the Q&A button, after which sort your query there. We’ll be answering some questions verbally, and for others, we’ll be typing in responses, which you’ll have the ability to see within the reply column. In order that’s an incredible useful resource to take a look at, and also you’ll get some actually good data there.

Please solely use the Zoom chat for technical assist or to share data. I’ve a number of colleagues on the again finish who’re going to assist reply to Zoom Q&As within the chat. So in case you have technical points, for those who’re having hassle with something associated to Zoom, pop these questions into the chat. We’re additionally stay streaming to YouTube.

And for those who’re watching on YouTube, you may add your inquiries to the feedback, and one other colleague will relay from there. So for these of you who’ve attended our webinars earlier than, at present is a bit bit completely different. We needed to present you a chance to ask your burning questions on migration, particularly as we enter that season this fall at the very least in our a part of the world.

Fortunately, we have now Kevin McGowan with us at present. Kevin, you may go forward and switch in your digicam. Hey, Kevin. Kevin not solely is aware of the analysis and science very deeply, he additionally has an actual knack for explaining it, and he’s a incredible storyteller. To begin, Kevin, thanks for being with us at present. And will you inform us a bit bit about your self and what you do.

[Kevin McGowan] Positive. I’m Kevin McGowan. I’m in Hen Academy right here on the lab. I write chicken programs and instruct folks about birds biology and identification and issues like that. Principally, I’m an ornithologist. I’ve been finding out birds for a really very long time. I obtained my PhD engaged on Florida scrub jays. I’ve been finding out American crows for the final 35 years. And I’m additionally an avid birder and a complete chicken head.

I imply, there are few of us across the lab like that. You may think that something chicken, I’m concerned about. And in order that implies that I do take note of issues. Principally I’m not a behavioral ecologist, however I like figuring out all types of issues, physiology and genetics and something chicken is sweet for me. In order that’s why I’m completely happy to reply all these questions that individuals are eager to learn about birds.

[Sarah Wagner] Superior. I’m excited. OK, let’s get began with a few of our questions that got here in from people who preregistered So we’ll begin with this query from Paula, which ought to set the stage for us. Why do birds migrate, and what are they looking for?

[Kevin McGowan] Individuals ought to know that not all birds migrate. Some birds simply keep in the identical place all 12 months lengthy. And that’s as a result of they’ll. However different birds are– different birds are feeding on meals that’s now not obtainable. So we take into consideration the birds up within the boreal forest. The chickadees keep there all 12 months spherical. They’ll discover, imagine it or not, insect eggs and little issues like that within the bark that they’ll discover sufficient meals to maintain them going throughout the winter.

However a number of the opposite birds feed on flying bugs or shifting bugs. And there aren’t too lots of these up in Canada within the winter time, in order that they must go elsewhere to search out meals. Migration is sort of at all times about discovering meals. It’s to not get out of the chilly as a result of birds can survive chilly. However there are specific inhospitable locations that they should depart, however it’s virtually at all times about meals.

[Sarah Wagner] All proper, nice. Meals, the nice inspiration. OK, Janet asks, what prompts the beginning of chicken migration, and the way do we expect the birds can sense these seasonal climate modifications? Moreover, why do some birds migrate sooner than others?

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, the factor that begins chicken migration often is a change in daylight– day size, the size of daylight. And what that does is that begins– that is type of the proximate mechanism that will get the birds brains altering, completely different hormones being produced, and the birds can sense even very small modifications in daylight size.

And we discover even within the tropics or the close to tropics like in Panama that a number of the antbirds down there can discover the change in daylight size though it’s virtually 12 hours a day however there’s a sufficiently small change that it truly influences their habits and their physiology.

Why do some birds migrate sooner than others? Partially as a result of their meals provide runs out or they only must get the heck out of there. The issues that we discover migrating first by right here in Central New York are literally the shorebirds. And the shorebirds breed up within the very excessive Arctic, and there’s not an extended season there. So in the event that they’ve succeeded in elevating younger or failed in elevating younger, they get the heck out of there early and transfer by.

After which we begin to see mainly the extra northern birds migrate first as a result of it’s getting chilly up there already, so their meals provides are beginning to decline. And so completely different birds migrate at completely different instances as a result of they’re following completely different assets, and a few of them have farther to go than others to go to their ultimate wintering grounds.

[Sarah Wagner] So it’s not essentially that like all of the raptors would go subsequent it could form of rely upon the place they’re coming from.

[Kevin McGowan] Actually, that’s true. I imply, there are some things. As I say, we see the shorebirds transfer early. We see the waterfowl transfer late, and so you may make some broad generalizations for some birds. However basically, it is dependent upon their very own private biology what they should preserve going. So sure, we will discover some. Even inside a bunch, there will probably be early ones and later ones, so.

We will inform– right here in upstate New York, we will fairly properly distinguish the dowitchers, the 2 species of dowitchers that come by as a result of short-billed dowitcher migrate by very, very early, after which late within the migration season for shorebirds, we see principally long-billed dowitchers. And in order that’s truly a key clue to their identification is if you’re truly seeing them come migrating by.

[Sarah Wagner] Tremendous useful. Let’s see. So that is type of comparable, however Tracy asks does the time of migration change yearly? Is there a number of fluctuation within the timing? And what are the– you already talked about birds that stick round however with chickadees in case you have different examples of birds that stick round.

[Kevin McGowan] Positive. I’m attempting to recollect what the primary a part of that was. Does the time of migration change yearly? No, the truth is, it’s truly pretty rigorous in some species that it’s very, very predictable. Like when red-winged blackbirds flip up in Central New York is at all times inside a two-week interval. And so a few of these issues are very exact.

Nonetheless, migration for a person chicken is dependent upon the circumstances that that chicken is in. And that features modifications in climate and native circumstances and stuff like that. So there’s at all times that type of fine-tuning. So it’s by no means exactly the identical. It’s just like the swallows coming again to Capistrano or the buzzards coming again to Hinckley, Ohio, the turkey vultures.

They faux it’s a single day, however it’s often a bit slop round it. However once more, it is extremely predictable to a sure diploma for those who give them the allowance of man, it’s raining at present, I’ll do it tomorrow form of factor that isn’t predictable however surprisingly constant from 12 months to 12 months.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah. We obtained a number of people asking, particularly, right here’s one from Cora, why do some species age teams seem to start migration at completely different instances? There are additionally rather a lot about– so if you wish to reply on the identical time folks asking why completely different age teams did and completely different sexes. Like why aren’t all of them simply going on the identical time?

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, that’s an fascinating factor about migration is we are likely to suppose, oh, properly, yeah, they only go. However they don’t. That there are completely different– the sexes do various things, and the juveniles do various things. And usually, what you see going first are the males.

The breeding males of a number of completely different birds depart the breeding grounds earlier than the females and the juveniles do. After which once more, as a basic rule of thumb, the adults depart first after which the juveniles depart later. And it might be they only want an extended time to fatten as much as migrate. However that’s a really predictable sample that we see.

It’s simple to see in ruby-throated hummingbirds within the Japanese US and Canada that the males disappear a few weeks earlier than the females. Properly, the females are round. So that you cease seeing male hummingbirds right here and someday in August, however the females nonetheless dangle round into September though they’re fairly properly headed to Texas by now so.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, and does that habits look rather a lot completely different like for those who’re watching your hummingbird feeder and it’s simply females there? I imply, I really feel like we see a number of seasonal shifts in stories from hummingbird feeders.

[Kevin McGowan] Oh, completely, completely. Yeah, modifications in habits and modifications within the intercourse ratios and issues like that. Additionally, I’ll say on another species in some species of birds, the men and women truly winter in numerous areas. And so just like the females will go farther south than the males of some species like white-throated sparrows and stuff like that.

And a number of that’s tied to the truth that the males are literally coming again earlier than the females. So like red-winged blackbirds come again to their breeding grounds within the north. The males come a number of weeks earlier than the females do. And partly, that’s their biology the place they’re attempting to arrange territories as a result of the females are going to return and decide a male primarily based on his territory.

And so they should– the nice males wish to get there early and ensure they get the most effective spots. The issue with that in locations like Canada or upstate New York is that we get winter storms and squalls and issues early within the spring. And so you may’t go too early otherwise you die in summer time. In order that’s the factor.

In some years, it’s an incredible technique to be the primary one there since you get the most effective territory, you get a few females, and also you produce essentially the most younger. However the subsequent 12 months doing precisely the identical factor, chances are you’ll– there could also be an enormous storm and also you die. So there’s a number of choice for taking dangers however not being too dangerous.

[Sarah Wagner] Proper. I believe we’ll get into navigation in only a minute. However what about species that there’s a element of their migration the place they really must go together with dad and mom as a way to know the route. Is that one thing that occurs?

[Kevin McGowan] It’s. Really, surprisingly, few birds do that that observe their household, however waterfowl and cranes are ones that we all know that do that the majority birds appear to determine their migratory route primarily based on simply intuition and eager to go in a sure route for a sure period of time. However some birds truly study their routes.

And in issues like geese, the younger geese observe their dad and mom. So that you’ll see an enormous flock of geese, and for those who look in it, you’ll see juvenile geese, and there’ll be little household teams like in snow geese. Snow geese are simple to inform the juveniles aside from the adults. Canada geese, not a lot. However for those who take a look at a flock of snow geese, you’ll usually see two grownup birds which have a few kids hanging with them.

After which once they take off, the entire household leaves as a bunch. And they also lead their youngsters right down to the place they need a winter. Identical factor with cranes. And we’ve been truly– folks have used ultralights to ultralight planes to steer captive raised cranes to a wintering floor.

This has been carried out in Europe too with some ibis’s. And I overlook what else I used to be studying about any individual in Germany who not too long ago who was actually good at main a few of these huge birds round instructing them the place to go emigrate. Most birds don’t try this although. Most birds discover their manner.

And one way or the other, it’s actually fairly outstanding. We don’t understand how a number of birds discover their approach to their wintering grounds or how they decide it. Actually, a number of them study what to do, however different ones find yourself getting there on their very own. And really, that is one thing I’ve to– I’ve to inform this as a result of this is likely one of the most superb tales I ever heard of.

And this was like– I’ll say we’re getting higher and higher gadgets, smaller and extra sophisticated gadgets to really monitor birds on migration. And the outcomes are thrilling. To have the ability to see precisely the place a few of these particular person birds go is simply actually, actually mind-boggling with some actually enjoyable, enjoyable outcomes popping out.

However a number of the outcomes are stuff that simply make you scratch your head and say, what? They did what? How did they try this? And the very first discuss I ever noticed at an American Ornithologist Society assembly was of a man who was placing satellite tv for pc transmitters on swallow-tailed kites in Florida.

And swallow-tailed kites breed from Florida down into South America, however their resident inhabitants is in South America. So when our birds go down there, we don’t know who they’re as a result of they only mix in with a bunch of residents. And so we actually didn’t know the place the birds breeding in america spend the winter.

And they also put some satellite tv for pc transmitters on a number of of those birds, and so they discovered that like we have been speaking about, the adults left earlier than the juveniles did and that the juveniles form of flocked up– get in huge flocks, however in addition they begin shifting to the Southwest and find yourself on the West Coast of South America. And so there was one– there was a mom of breeding feminine at a nest and her daughter that have been each tagged, and the mom left like a month earlier than the daughter did.

And so they took numerous routes to get down there, however all of them began congregating someplace round Columbia. And it turned out that all of them went by a single move in Bolivia into the Amazon basin. And all the birds, the mom had gotten a month head begin, however the daughter caught as much as her, and so they went by the move collectively on the identical day.

[Sarah Wagner] Wow.

[Kevin McGowan] And it’s like, what? How may they try this? Why would they try this? We don’t even have the appropriate inquiries to ask but about that’s the way you get one thing like that to occur. However that’s what birds do, and we’re discovering out increasingly more about that stuff. And that one has simply caught with me for years as a result of that simply blew me away. It simply blew me away. How did they try this?

[Sarah Wagner] That’s unbelievable.

[Kevin McGowan] We didn’t know.

[Sarah Wagner] Proper. That must be a e-book at the very least. OK, let’s dig into navigation a bit bit extra. This can be a huge one. And in fascinated about navigation strategies, the 4 and five-year-old classroom from the wildlife preschool wrote in to ask, how do they know the place to go, and what in the event that they overlook their manner?

[Kevin McGowan] That’s nice. Properly, a few of them– as we simply stated, a number of of them, a only a few of them are taught the place to go that their dad and mom train them. And what in the event that they overlook their manner? Then they get misplaced. And we discover this turning up– not a number of birds get misplaced, however we do know that some birds do get misplaced.

They find yourself being locations that none of their identical species is. And that occurs, and so they simply form of wander round till they discover their manner again or they might by no means get to the ultimate vacation spot. That’s a part of it. However they might discover some place that’s simply pretty much as good. So we’ve had a few of these wayward strays and issues like European birds that find yourself in North America.

And so they’re notable as a result of they’re uncommon. And so they typically return to the identical wintering place over and over that they by no means do get fairly again on monitor. Different ones could go dwelling and work out how one can go to take the appropriate flip or the left flip the right manner the subsequent 12 months, however a few of them don’t.

[Sarah Wagner] OK, a number of people are questioning about time of day that completely different teams wish to migrate and the way on earth they sustain the vitality to try this.

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, completely different birds do migrate at completely different instances of the day. Lots of people are shocked to know that the majority of migration occurs at night time, that the majority birds fly at night time. And there are a number of causes for this. One is that there are fewer predators with the ability to catch you at night time.

You may’t actually forage that a lot, so that you may as properly fly. And as we came upon, when their imaginative and prescient will get– when there’s not sufficient mild to see very properly, birds can truly activate a distinct sense and see the magnetic fields of the earth. And to allow them to inform north and south as a result of they’ll see the magnetic fields. We’ve recognized that they’ll detect magnetic fields for a really very long time, however we haven’t been in a position to determine how they did it.

And solely not too long ago did we discover that there aren’t particular magneto receptors within the invoice or something like that. It’s they’ve pigments within the eye that really can get into– with a really low degree of sunshine, they’ll take the electrons on a few of their atoms and get them right into a quantum state that’s type of neither right here nor there and that it may possibly– they’re delicate to magnetic fields after which they’ll see that.

However there must be some mild, however it may possibly’t be a number of mild. And it’s form of like if you consider if you’re in a darkish state of affairs and your eyes get tailored to the darkish, you don’t see colours. You solely see shades of grey. However then when the sunshine will get robust sufficient then abruptly growth, you begin to see colours.

And we name that the rod-cone break the place you’re going from rods utilizing the rod cells in your eyes which might be actually good at low mild however then you definitely’re switching on– at greater intensities, you turn on the cones, which may see coloration. And so it’s form of like that that they’ve a threshold that they go into.

The primary time I discovered that this was the visible system that was utilizing the magnetic fields, I believed to myself, I learn that information and it’s like, oh, that’s why they fly at night time is as a result of then they’ll see. And that does appear to be the consensus is that a number of the nighttime flying is as a result of that enables them to make use of their magnetic sense to detect north and south. I forgot what the second half of the query was. It was–

[Sarah Wagner] Oh, it was about how they gas themselves to have the ability to try this.

[Kevin McGowan] Proper, how they gas themselves. Some birds do that in another way. There are birds that migrate throughout the day, and so they typically forage throughout the day. Different birds will fly for some time to a vacation spot then cease and spend two or three days consuming to refill alongside the best way and placed on fats to then go– in order that they placed on fats, fly to make use of up the fats, cease, placed on extra fats, fly to make use of extra.

Different birds like crows that do migrate to some extent, they may usually forage throughout the day as they go as a result of they’re flying by day. And an fascinating swap that one which I simply type of actually was fascinated about after we put out our hummingbird course not too long ago is a ruby-throated hummingbird, which is discovered breeding throughout Japanese North America.

And so they winter in Central America from Southwest Mexico right down to Panama. And if you consider going from Quebec to Guatemala metropolis or one thing like that, there’s an enormous factor in the best way that’s the Gulf of Mexico. And they also may both take the brief route and fly over it or take the lengthy route and go– the simpler one and go round it. And it seems what they do is most ruby-throated hummingbirds within the fall, they take the simple path to go round it.

Like all of our birds from New York are in all probability in Texas proper now. And so they migrate by the coastal areas of Texas in enormous numbers. There’s truly a hummingbird pageant or a number of hummingbird festivals down there proper now which might be– you may go one place. And like in folks in these cities put out hummingbird feeders, and you may go see 200 hummingbirds in a single particular person’s yard because the ruby throats undergo. It’s actually fairly a particular factor.

And you may watch this on our standing and tendencies maps. If any individual may throw within the hyperlink to the standing and development map for the migration of the ruby-throated hummingbird, it’s actually cool to look at as a result of what occurs is so within the fall, they’re not in a rush to get down there. They’re simply going to go take trip, in order that they’re simply lazing it down. However within the spring, they’ve issues to do, and so they wish to get again, and so they wish to begin breeding.

And for those who watch that standing and tendencies map, what you’ll see is that rapidly, these birds begin to congregate within the northern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula, after which growth, they’re in Louisiana and Alabama that they fly– they do fly over the Gulf within the spring utterly. And that might in all probability take a hummingbird perhaps 15 hours of flying strong straight throughout the Gulf.

And there’s no place to take a seat down and take a break if you’re flying throughout the Gulf of Mexico. So it’s actually fairly outstanding that these birds can try this. And so they placed on fats– they virtually double their physique weight within the Yucatan whereas they’re bulking as much as make this one huge, super leap, however they do it.

And so, once more, that standing and tendencies map, that’s the primary actually good definitive assertion to me that that is how the hummingbirds do it. You may watch them go round by Texas on the west going south, however then no person goes that manner. All of them simply bounce throughout the Gulf, actually fairly outstanding.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah.

[Kevin McGowan] And the chicken’s this huge.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, they’re not hiding any weight due to–

[Kevin McGowan] They solely weigh 5 grams or so. It’s like a few nickels. And it may possibly make all of it the best way throughout the Gulf. It’s fairly outstanding.

[Sarah Wagner] And it’s so nice to have the ability to watch them as soon as they’ve made it as a result of they care much less about us and extra about consuming.

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, you wager. And, you already know, I’ve watched– I’ve watched hummingbirds come off the Gulf on the West Coast of Florida, and so they don’t go anyplace. They simply type of drop 3 ft onto shore. And the one place I used to be watching in Saint Petersburg, Florida was a patch– there was an enormous patch of thistles. And so they have been like 35 hummingbirds that have been there claiming a thistle to take a seat on. And the thistle’s simply behind the dunes form of factor.

And it was actually cool as a result of I bear in mind the one spring once I was down in Florida that the males turned up in like early April, one thing like that. And there was simply this small patch of flowers with 35 male hummingbirds, considered one of which had a yellow gorget, which was actually bizarre. All of the crimson males after which this man that flashed yellow.

He had some form of drawback occurring along with his feathers. However then about two or three weeks later, I went to the identical patch, and it was filled with feminine hummingbirds as a result of once more, the females are coming after. And it was a number of weeks after the males had come by. So it was actually– I’m speaking rather a lot about ruby-throated hummingbirds at present however they’re–

[Sarah Wagner] We had a number of questions so–

[Kevin McGowan] They’re simply such a spectacular story.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, yeah. There are different teams that cross the Gulf too, proper?

[Kevin McGowan] Oh, certain.

[Sarah Wagner] What’s the distinction in how raptors use that space and a few songbirds? So how would raptors do it in another way?

[Kevin McGowan] Raptors don’t wish to go fly over water as a result of there are not any updrafts. There are not any thermals. Plenty of raptors coast their manner around the globe that they attempt to do it with as little vitality use as attainable. And so they have discovered how one can reap the benefits of the updrafts which might be created because the sunshine heats up the land. However the sunshine doesn’t warmth up the water like that, and so there aren’t these huge updrafts.

So, the truth is, most raptors are likely to keep away from going throughout massive our bodies of water and take the across the nook factor. That’s why in Mexico particularly and in Central America there like Veracruz is understood for this. Hundreds of raptors are concentrated coming throughout that spot as they go across the West of the Gulf of Mexico. Identical factor in Europe and like in Israel. A number of the locations the birds don’t wish to fly throughout the Mediterranean.

They wish to go across the Mediterranean. And so you find yourself with these incredible migration focus areas the place you see hundreds of hawks coming by at one time. It’s actually fairly spectacular. Songbirds, then again, can deal with it as a result of they’re simply getting up excessive and cruising for so long as they’ll.

And so they, once more, placed on– typically they double their physique weight in fats in order that they’ll use that fats as gas for lengthy distance migrants. And a few of them just like the blackpoll warbler takes off from Maine and Nova Scotia and flies straight to South America. It flies over the Atlantic Ocean to fly straight to South America in a single flight, which, once more, a bit chicken this huge can do that’s simply fairly a outstanding story.

[Sarah Wagner] And the way did they determine that out?

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, we don’t know. It’s one thing says go that manner for this lengthy. And we all know we will see– truly, we will see this in birds. There’s this cool time period that’s in German referred to as “zugunruhe” and meaning migratory restlessness. And so we will– you watch this, and it’s been properly studied in birds that for those who preserve them in captivity, as the sunshine modifications, as the times get smaller or longer, they begin to get antsy.

And so they simply form of transfer round of their cages, and so they simply wish to go someplace. And Steve Emlen, who was right here at Cornell when he did his PhD analysis at College of Michigan, he checked out these birds and truly put this stuff referred to as Emlen funnels the place he has a paper funnel and the birds are standing on an ink pad, and so they simply bounce in a single route.

And what you discover is that earlier than the zugunruhe begins, they’re simply form of hopping in random instructions. However when it begins to get to be time to go, they head both north or south, whichever manner they’re purported to be going, and so they simply wish to do it. And it’s simply this must go additional, to go additional, go south, go south, go down, you already know. And it’s like a information on them or no matter that makes them simply wish to try this for a sure period of time.

And on the proximal scale of how do you make it occur, that’s comparatively simple. You may think about that for those who get a route that you simply wish to go and also you go for a very long time and chances are you’ll discover one thing that pulls you to remain there or chances are you’ll simply run out of the urge to do it. And that’s doubtlessly the best way this stuff work with birds.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, zugunruhe, such a superb phrase. OK, sorry. Again to questions. Sylvia has one about staging areas. So she says the place do migrating birds collect in massive flocks once they transfer south? For instance, we see migrant warblers within the spring and fall in our yard, and I’m wondering once they meet up with a bunch. So that is coming from Ottawa.

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, some issues it’s apparent. I imply, waterfowl collect in lakes and ponds and alongside the ocean. And so they wish to be in flocks once they migrate. Issues like warblers, it’s not so apparent. And you’ll find unfastened flocks of issues like warblers migrating flock loosely collectively. And I don’t suppose that they really essentially go someplace to stage.

The songbirds make a number of noise once they’re migrating. All of them appear to have a chip be aware that they provide that for some birds, it’s the one time they use that exact be aware is once they’re migrating. It tends to be– we have a tendency to consider it as being one thing that claims, I’m right here. The place are you?

And you may hear this typically when the thrushes are migrating within the night, you may hear thrushes begin to name proper at nightfall. And so they begin to use this flight be aware that I believe will get everyone in tune with the place everyone is. And so they could begin to get nearer collectively after which categorical some degree of pleasure about what they’re able to do.

After which all of them take off and type of mainly keep up a correspondence. They aren’t essentially in a good flock like a bunch of geese or one thing like that however undoubtedly inside listening to of one another. And that’s just about what they do is that they make these calls all night time lengthy, and I believe that retains a number of the birds near their species simply by saying I’m right here. Anyone else on the market? The place are you?

[Sarah Wagner] I misplaced who requested, however somebody questioned if some birds simply go it solo, like if people migrate and not using a group.

[Kevin McGowan] Sure, undoubtedly some do. There are some species I’m attempting to consider. I can’t consider one proper off hand, however there are some birds which might be– you virtually by no means discover a bunch of them collectively on migration or within the wintering grounds. I imply, they’re simply not social or something. It’s like they’re standoffish. I had a cousin like that, didn’t actually wish to socialize with the remainder of us, so.

[Sarah Wagner] Proper, OK, right here’s one we will dig into physiology with this one. Claire asks how a lot physique weight is misplaced throughout migration flights? And also you touched on this a bit bit, however you might go into that a bit bit extra if you’d like.

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, physique weight, rather a lot. I imply, that’s why one of many huge issues is– I overlook. There’s a technical time period for it like hyperphagia or one thing like that meaning eat greater than it is advisable to so that you simply placed on weight. And birds get into this state the place they’re, the truth is, placing on weight virtually straight from what they’re consuming.

I don’t understand how the metabolism modifications precisely. I’m not a physiologist however undoubtedly when premigration birds begin consuming rather a lot and so they’re placing on a number of weight. Some birds double their weight. I imply, I had a– I bear in mind skinning an upland Sandpiper once I labored for the museum right here that it had– I overlook.

I believe it hit– struck a window or one thing like that. But it surely had a lot fats on it that once I took the fats off, it was mainly half as a lot as the remainder of the physique. And it’s like wow, that’s a number of fats to be carrying round. And once more, a few of these small birds truly double their weight. And you may see it on them.

For those who’ve been to banders, you may see a number of the fats within the furculum. That’s one of many normal issues that you simply do if you’re banding a chicken and assessing its situation is how a lot fats that they’ve on them. However for those who actually needed to see it, I imply, I’ve skinned a number of birds. And if you take the pores and skin off, there’s a number of fats in all places. You simply get utterly coated in it. And so they’ll do these lengthy flights in order that they’re powered as much as spend greater than a day in flight.

After which they’ll get to a different spot the place they stopover spots on migration that may be terribly essential for migration for the birds to gas up as a result of a few of these birds are going lengthy, lengthy distances from Canada to South America. And you may’t do it in a single shot. It’s important to do your greatest shot after which fatten up and do it once more a few instances.

And so these locations on migration, we have a tendency to consider oh, there’s a breeding grounds after which there’s the wintering grounds, and that’s all we have now to fret about. However no, there are these stopover spots that may be simply as essential within the survival of those birds getting from one spot to a different. They must cease and refuel. And that’s what the factor is that you simply’ll see alongside the Gulf Coast within the spring.

The birds which have come throughout the Gulf of Mexico, they’ll simply sit in that spot for a number of days foraging and foraging and placing on extra fats earlier than they transfer on. So it’s not all– for many birds, it’s not only one shot that you simply simply preserve going. Normally, it’s fly and cease someplace for a few days, fly to someplace else, keep there for a few days and preserve shifting alongside like that.

[Sarah Wagner] Very cool. So a number of– there are a number of questions on what people can do to assist birds throughout migration. And so a few of that is likely to be like planting native vegetation that the birds may wish to eat the fruit from. However Mary Ellen asks are there explicit meals and feeders that common suburbanites can put as much as assist migrating birds?

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, hummingbird feeders, the hummingbirds actually like hummingbird feeders. And also you received’t make them cease migrating and keep it up– and stick together with your feeder until it will get chilly. They’re not going to try this. However they may use it as a supply of low cost vitality that they’ll placed on and assist them alongside their manner. Suet for a number of the different birds is sweet.

Yeah, it’s onerous to place one thing out that the blackpoll warbler goes to wish to– it’s onerous to assist a few of these birds. It’s like oh, yeah, you already know, I can’t– I can’t provide help to Hudsonian godwit, you already know. I don’t have meals for you. However you do what you may. The opposite factor to do to assist birds alongside throughout that is flip off your lights at night time. That’s an enormous one.

And naturally, this actually performs out within the cities. After which there are the packages that folks have– numerous organizations are working with, together with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology which might be attempting to encourage huge cities to chop down on their mild utilization throughout peak migration time as a result of birds get confused. If you consider moth, why do moths come to flames?

Properly, as a result of once they’re navigating within the previous instances, what was mild– the sky was lighter than the bottom. And so for those who needed to go up, all you needed to do was observe the sunshine and go up. And that doesn’t work anymore. Now that entire factor of observe the sunshine, observe the sunshine as a result of that mild is up, it’s not. And it will get birds confused. It will get moths confused.

And typically particularly in actually vibrant mild conditions like skyscrapers and issues like that, it may possibly trigger the loss of life of the chicken by inflicting that form of confusion that they fly to the sunshine and run into the home windows and issues like that. And so flip off your lights at night time. Plant native vegetation. Put up a hummingbird feeder. That doesn’t do all of it, however these are a few tangible issues that folks can do.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, nice begins. And we’ll put hyperlinks to a few of these issues within the chat. There’s a– to the Lights Out marketing campaign and another issues that needs to be useful assets.

[Kevin McGowan] Nice.

[Sarah Wagner] OK, this one’s a bit bit random, however we obtained a number of questions on geese, and particularly Canada geese. So lots of people are actually confused about why some are sticking round and a few migrate. So do you wish to give us the short rundown of that story?

[Kevin McGowan] Positive. Yeah, it’s complicated now. 50 years in the past, it wasn’t that complicated. They have been principally simply migratory geese going by most of North America. And that is truly a extremely cool story as a result of 100 years in the past or so, there was a type of subspecies of Canada goose referred to as the enormous Canada goose. And it lived across the Nice Lakes space.

And it was primarily resident. However they have been hunted out and have been regarded as extinct 100 years in the past. After which someplace within the 40s or 50s, any individual found a remnant inhabitants of them up in Wisconsin or Minnesota, I overlook which. And it’s like, oh my God, this factor isn’t extinct. Right here they’re, and we have to put it aside.

And so what can we do? What can we do? Properly, let’s take it and get all of the eggs out of that one basket and put some over right here and put some over there. And folks stated oh yeah, you already know, like Ohio was like, certain, we’ll take some. And New York was like, yeah, we’ll take some. And we’ll see if they’ll stay elsewhere and what we will do. And lo and behold, it labored.

They did reproduce, and so they saved reproducing, and so they saved reproducing, and so they saved pooping all around the golf programs. And it’s like, oh, wait, wait. We don’t want this lots of them. And for lots of components of the nation, they’re the predominant type that you simply see are these big Canada geese.

And they’re– they don’t migrate. They transfer round a bit bit as they must if the water freezes and issues like that, however they usually are resident. However nonetheless the Arctic breeding Canada nonetheless move by, however they’re simply so not noticeable in comparison with the residents that folks have transplanted in all places.

So it does get a bit bit complicated. However we have now like in New York, there’s a migratory looking season or I imply, they really regulate the looking seasons in another way for the residents and the migrants. And we do acknowledge the truth that migrants are coming by and are in all probability going additional south than right here to spend the winter.

However the different factor that’s modified with goose migration is again in– once more, a good variety of years in the past, I believe this was beginning to occur perhaps 50 years in the past within the ’60s or ’70s that the birds from Canada began what we name brief stopping. And so they have been coming throughout, particularly in Central US and Canada that there have been so many farm fields that the geese as an alternative of taking place to Louisiana for the winter, they began stopping in Iowa.

And it’s like, meh, there’s a number of meals right here. We don’t must go any additional south. So they really modified a number of the migratory pathways of the birds by offering them some model new enormous meals supply additional north in order that they didn’t find yourself going as far. So birds apparently are very dynamic in the best way they stay their lives.

And they’re going to change their motion patterns and their distribution patterns primarily based on the circumstances at hand. And we’ve seen this by watching it carefully during the last 60 years or so, and we’ve seen numerous these tales that birds change the place they stay primarily based on what’s occurring.

[Sarah Wagner] Proper, there are many different questions on simply precisely how they do it. However I really feel like it is a good segue into– we obtained rather a lot– I might say like 70% of the questions we obtained are about response to local weather change and pure disasters. So this one’s form of related, particularly proper now. Wendy asks, do hurricanes have an effect on fall migration, particularly pondering of Lee that simply went by the– went up the East Coast throughout peak migration?

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, I used to be fascinated about Lee too as a result of it was coming– I used to be on the Coast of Massachusetts final week when it got here by, and so they canceled my flight to get out. So does it have an effect on migration? Properly, it affected me. I needed to delay the day. And that’s form of the factor that occurs with birds is sure, birds take note of the climate.

Sure, they’re delicate to modifications within the climate. They do one way or the other appear to have the ability to acknowledge modifications in air stress and barometric stress. How they try this we do not know, however there’s proof that they modify their habits primarily based on what the air stress is. And so they are going to be affected by this.

They discover it, in fact, however it is dependent upon which manner the winds are going and what precisely that– in the event that they smack proper into it if it’s coming straight up their migratory route, that’s a foul factor. And a few birds can truly get what we name entrained into the hurricane itself and carried far astray just like the flamingos which might be at the moment throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey and–

[Sarah Wagner] Kentucky.

[Kevin McGowan] –stuff like that and Kentucky, yeah, I noticed that in Kentucky too. I left Ohio just like the day earlier than a pair confirmed up in southwestern Ohio. I used to be visiting household, however missed the flamingos. So these issues are apparent sorts of displacements of birds, however sure, the opposite stuff occurs too. However the different factor to know is it’s not– a hurricane isn’t just a wind multi functional route. It truly spins.

And so within the northern hemisphere, they spin counterclockwise. And so what meaning is the– so Lee was developing the East Coast from the south going north, north to northeast however the place I used to be in Massachusetts on the west facet of that hurricane, the winds have been from the north as a result of that’s shifting north, however it’s spinning, and we’re getting these winds which might be coming off the highest of the hurricane that have been blowing from the north into New England.

And I hoped that perhaps that wasn’t going to deliver any Caribbean birds up with it. These are on the east facet of the hurricane. However on the west facet, I hoped perhaps one thing like some storm petrels or one thing is likely to be pushed nearer to land or perhaps a gannet or a kittiwake or one thing like that from Nova Scotia can be blown down right here. However I didn’t discover something like that.

[Sarah Wagner] All proper, so a number of questions in regards to the fireplace that we skilled this summer time– this previous summer time particularly. So Debbie asks, do we all know how the forest fires in Canada and the Pacific Northwest and West have affected the timing and distance for migration this 12 months with respect to smoke?

[Kevin McGowan] It’s an apparent query to ask as a result of the birds undoubtedly needed to have been affected by the fires. I heard stories of some migrants coming by early that boreal breeding birds which may have been affected, however I don’t know any actual onerous proof for that but.

So it’ll be fascinating to see how the eBird stories shake out after the season’s over and whether or not we will truly detect an early migration as a result of in case your breeding habitat burns down, it’s like oops, it’s July, may as properly return– go south and get began on the holiday there and beat the frenzy and get shifting south.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, we should see.

[Kevin McGowan] Yeah, as I say, clearly, an enormous occasion like that that coated all the Northeast, we have now yellow skies that has to have affected the birds in a roundabout way. And now it’s not in a great way I’m fairly certain. So aside from the black-backed woodpeckers and three-toed woodpeckers, they’re completely happy to go in and use the burn stubs as nesting and discover– and the beetles that go in and love the lifeless timber.

And timber can’t defend themselves anymore, so the beetles can take over. And that could be a meals bonanza for these woodpeckers and another animals too. So these burned areas aren’t ruined. They’re modified, and birds will reap the benefits of the modifications as greatest they’ll.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, all proper, a number of questions on local weather change. Right here’s one fairly particular one. Are waterfowl flyways geographically shifting from their historic areas because of local weather or different modifications?

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, I don’t know of something altering dramatically apart from the brief stopping instance that I gave that occurred with Canada geese and snow geese and another birds. And that once more modifications that historic modifications that we made with our farming practices. However I don’t learn about waterfowl particularly altering programs. They nonetheless appear to be touring in a lot of the identical locations that they’ve. Actually a risk, however I don’t know of any proof of that in the meanwhile.

[Sarah Wagner] What are some modifications we’ve seen with chicken migration basically with local weather change?

[Kevin McGowan] Properly, there does appear to be some development of birds shifting northward with some species. This isn’t as widespread or as onerous and quick as some folks appear to suppose, however there’s proof that some birds are exhibiting up earlier as a result of the temperatures are getting greater earlier. And that might be a superb or a foul factor. As I stated, birds change their distributions of their habits relying on the circumstances. They adapt.

And this might be good for some birds that they get to have an extended breeding season as a result of they stand up there earlier or it might be unhealthy as a result of it may not be met– we fear about the truth that what was an indicator of meals abundance coming will not be anymore, that the bugs and the flowers could not have– will not be advancing the identical manner that the migration would.

And so for those who get there and get your timing incorrect, then that might be an issue as a result of once more, birds are utilizing cues that aren’t direct cues of right here’s the meals, make your infants. It’s for those who begin now form of factor that by the point your chicks are sufficiently big that they have to be– that they hatch and have to be fed, there will probably be bugs round. So get began whereas there’s nonetheless snow on the bottom. That’s these issues if these get disconnected, that might be an issue.

And so we’re waiting for that. However we haven’t seen any– I don’t suppose we’ve seen huge successes and large failures but from this mismatch or not of those modifications. If that modifications, the birds will change. However precisely how that’s going to play out, we’re watching. We’re it to see. Individuals are concerned about precisely these questions.

[Sarah Wagner] Proper, I’m attempting to determine what to ask you with solely 5 minutes left. Let’s see. Somebody requested what distance is taken into account a migration as a result of clearly, there are all completely different sorts of actions that birds make, however what’s the distance that qualifies as a migration?

[Kevin McGowan] That’s a good query and since birds transfer from in every single place from a matter of miles to a matter of hundreds of miles. And a few birds are like, say, American robins on the north finish of their vary round– we’ll have robins. We at all times have robins on our Christmas depend right here in Ithaca, and we’re fairly far north.

However a lot of the robins transfer as they must. So it seems to be just like the snow cowl is an efficient indicator of when robins transfer. They wish to forage on the bottom, and so they’ll– a number of robins solely go when they should. If the berries run out or if there will get to be an excessive amount of snow cowl and so they can’t discover meals, then they’ll transfer additional south. A few of them go, they only go and head to Georgia from Ontario or one thing like that.

And also you don’t get them sticking round. However some do. And I bear in mind the– typically it’s onerous to know. Once I was doing my dissertation work in Central Florida at Archbold Organic Station, we had the red-headed woodpeckers that have been breeding within the scrub. They’d fly south within the winter to the south finish of the station and hand around in the longleaf pines throughout the winter.

And it’s like what? But it surely was. It was an trustworthy to God southward motion. Was it migration or was it simply altering, you already know, the place their habitat? But it surely was– that at all times struck me as like, yep, they fly south for the winter, and so they solely fly 10 miles. However hey, they’re nonetheless going south. I wouldn’t name that migration, however it’s onerous to say.

After which there’s some birds like crows and blue jays the place some birds keep put and different ones go elsewhere. And for the crows, for our crows, I ought to say a number of the crows north of us are principally migratory, and virtually everyone will get out of the chilly north within the winter and are available someplace round right here.

A few of our birds that I’ve marked and adopted them have adopted a few of these birds right down to Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania from right here. I’ve gotten stories of tags being seen there. And we’ve gotten a number of birds from Montreal and stuff like that. However most of my recognized birds, the breeders, they only keep put all winter.

So it is a combined migration technique the place some birds transfer and a few birds don’t. And for the crows, it seems that it’s principally non-breeders which might be shifting. However that’s not essentially the case as a result of typically birds simply disappear for some time after which come again. So there are completely different methods of migration with completely different birds in all places.

[Sarah Wagner] Very cool. All proper, properly, I believe that’s about it, Kevin. Due to the viewers for such nice questions at present. This was actually enjoyable. Thanks, Kevin, for taking the time to speak to us and sharing your entire fascinating tales about chicken migration.

Tomorrow, we will probably be emailing our Zoom attendees with the recorded webinar and a number of the assets that we mentioned at present. For those who’re watching on YouTube, verify the feedback for these hyperlinks and assets. These will persist with the video. And that’s all for at present. Thanks once more to Kevin and the viewers, and have a pleasant day.

[Kevin McGowan] Thanks all for coming and taking part. It’s a number of enjoyable to speak birds.

[Sarah Wagner] Yeah, take pleasure in. Thanks.

 

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