Saturday 21 September 2019

It will be lonely when the birds are gone

I live deep in the city yet I enjoy visits from a number of our feathered friends. In the winter I am occasionally honoured by the visit of a wee chickadee. A bashful fellow, he flits half-hidden among the branches of a tall spruce that towers over my apartment.

Frequently a magpie visits me on my balcony. He throws dirt out of my flower posts, scolds me fiercely to let me know who's boss, and then goes on his way. He’s a nuisance but I love the little rascal. I’d miss his visits if he were not there. And the way things are going, one day he, and all his kind, may not be.

According to a new study, "Decline of the North American avifauna," published in the journal Science, there are almost three billion fewer birds in Canada and the United States than there were 50 years ago, a decline of 29 per cent. Birds that migrate long distances have been particularly hard hit, but even species that do well in cities are disappearing. They face a variety of threats: increased pesticide use, domestic cats, collisions with windows, fragmentation of forests, and habitat degradation by intensifying agriculture, urban sprawl, and fragmentation of forests. In other words, it's all our doing.

Sometimes I think we are like a fungus upon the Earth, spreading across and devouring, and often ruining even for our own species, more and more space. When we exterminate large numbers of our own species, which we do regularly, we call it a holocaust. Should we not then call it a holocaust when we exterminate all of another species? If so, then we are committing holocaust after holocaust after holocaust—thousands of holocausts. According to a comprehensive UN report on biodiversity, one million species of plants and animals are at risk of extinction, half of them due to "insufficient habitat for long-term survival."

There are things each of us can do to save the birds, including keeping kitty indoors (after habitat loss, cats are the biggest reason for the decline), replacing grass with native plants (native plants can provide shelter, nesting areas and food for birds—grass doesn't), avoiding pesticides, and watching birds and helping track them (there's even an app—eBird).

Perhaps we can still halt the decline, but being the rapacious species we are the odds are not good. Birds are our most delightful neighbours. How like us to repay them for the delight they provide by systematically driving them into extinction.

2 comments:

the salamander said...

.. not at all sure I have posted here previously.. though I do follow your blog, amony many.. If you are on Twitter, there is a kindeed soul @harry_fosters whose avian photography is phenomenal.. Primarily the jays he feeds, but he gets a tremendous diversity on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River. The techical capability astonishes me.. the detail, and matchless exposure.

I send him my compliments, start every day keeping an eye for a new post. I tell him what birds we see in our backyard or nearby in the flatlands of Toronto. Right now the monarch butterfly are coming south in numbers, very nice .. and we see many swallowtails and the odd mourning cloak. There are raptors in the air of course.. we are midtown with many many deep ravines, thus peregrine, harrier, redtail and some to fadt and small to identify. Woodpeckers, goldfinch, chickadee, and currently the robins will hang upside down to score some more tiny blue juniper berries. two doors over is a mountain ash.. and we've seen over a hundred cedar waxwing enjoying fermented berries.. eeow ! Starlings and of course jays, cardinals.. and overhead the swallows dart.. and we see goose formation flyovers and even some southbound herons. Some lovely junkos, buntings, and misc wren.. and the laugh of the year was a squirell who fell from the junioer while harrassing a stunning parakeet that arrived one morning. We want and intend to feed birds.. think we bailed many out last winter, and we are trying to regenerate our milkweek crop. Two years ago we had 250.. this year we likely do not have a single pod. I know where all the milkweed in the neighborhood is though, and its a bumper year.. and despite our milkweed and blackberry fading.. I will harvest hundreds of ripe pods.

We are 'planet toast' if we destroy habitat and species.. folks need to recognize the devastation of 'the beautiful creatures' as Bruce Cockburn called them

Rural said...

And I live deep in the country Bill and normally see dozens of winged visitors daily but in recent weeks the count has been almost zero, not part of the long term trend I would think but I sure miss them, hope they return soon. See The Bruce Peninsular Bird Observatory http://bpbo.ca/hints-of-change/ for more info.