How Do Tornadoes Affect Birds?

After the initial destruction, twisters can benefit some avian species.

In the wake of Oklahoma鈥檚 tornado tragedy, it鈥檚 only natural that the people affected will be on everyone鈥檚 minds. Any natural disaster calls for prolonged introspection, especially facing the loss of life. Eventually curiosity turns us onto other consequences鈥攖he wildlife and surrounding habitats that the storm also left in its path. How do plants, birds, and other wildlife fare after a tornado tears through an area?

The general consensus seems to be that we don鈥檛 really know. As weather systems go, the is easier to study because their broad spread and brooding nature makes them easier to predict. But tornadoes, which typically rip through a region called 鈥楾ornado Alley鈥欌攂etween Iowa, Colorado, and Texas鈥攆rom late springinto summer, are coiled tightly like forceful weather springs, and they move fast鈥攎aking them harder to detect in advance. Despite the many mysterious surrounding twisters, we do have some knowledge about how they affect nature.

 

Sensing the storm 

Birds are lucky in that they can detect minute pressure shifts before unusual weather arrives. However, , 爆料公社 field editor and author, believes that our feathered friends are worse at predicting tornadoes than we are because the twisters move so fast and are so localized. 鈥淗umans have more advanced warning than birds do because we have the nightly news,鈥 he says. There is one thing that birds can do more effectively than us, though, he says鈥攅scape. The assumption is that 鈥渁 lot birds get out of the way,鈥 he says; 鈥渢hey have enough sense鈥 to leave.

 

In the tornado鈥檚 path

Like hurricanes鈥攚hich can actually spawn twisters鈥攖ornadoes are hugely destructive and can flatten things in their paths even more severely. 鈥淭he intense concentration of habitat destruction that occurs undoubtedly makes a difference in bird habitat,鈥 Kaufman says. Trees where birds nest are ripped from the ground, and debris from shredded structures and vegetation obscures underground burrows. Any birds caught up in the storm are presumably killed鈥攁lthough there is no real way of measuring wildlife deaths after a storm. Bodies are hard to find amid the debris, and over long distances in the rural areas where tornadoes often strike. Furthermore, to gain a real grasp of the mortality, experts would require pre-tornado wildlife census against which to compare the numbers of surviving individuals after the storm鈥攁 rarity.

, a research wildlife biologist with the USDA Forest Service in Amherst, Massachusetts, adds that when it comes to the effect that tornadoes have on wildlife, direct mortality is less of a concern to conservationists. 鈥淚 think principally the effects on wildlife are through changes in habitat,鈥 he says, since habitat so strongly influences wildlife survival after a storm.

After a tornado has blown a hole through a forest, for instance, 鈥淵ou鈥檇 see a lot of logs lying down, and brush and snags standing where trees have been snapped off,鈥 says King, who has studied forests hit by twisters. 鈥淭he principal changes are to the removal of forest canopy.鈥 That allows a lot of light to hit the ground, which in turn results in smaller saplings colonizing the former wooded areas, forming a dense thicket over time. The habitat shifts from forest to shrub, making way for different species to move in to the area. 鈥淭he golden-winged warbler is a shrubland species that has been the subject of a lot of conservation concern, and would use tornado-damaged sites,鈥 says King. He adds to that list the chestnut-sided and prairie warblers, as well brown thrashers.

 

A return to (a different kind of) normalcy 

As illustrated by birds, as a forest undergoes transitions between destruction, regrowth, and maturity, the species that inhabit it may change, King explains.

When it comes to birds, the timing of tornadoes鈥攕tormy late spring and early summer鈥攐ften coincides with nesting season. After the storm passes, birds are often drawn back to their established territories. 鈥淭here鈥檚 such a powerful instinct for them to return to their nesting habitat,鈥 Kaufman explains, 鈥渢hey can go back and figure out, oh well this is the spot.鈥 Unfortunately for them, 鈥榯he spot鈥 might be a downed tree or an obliterated building.

Kaufman offers a purely anecdotal account. He recalls that after a tornado passed through Kansas in the late 1960s, he noticed a posse of barn swallows repeatedly circling one area. Afterward, he realized a barn had stood there before the tornado struck, and was likely where the birds had built their nests. (The birds could not have rebuilt in the area, since everything was gone.)

While much remains unknown, King loosely compares the tornado-stricken habitats is to those devastated by fire: Some landscapes鈥攅specially forests鈥 after disaster strikes. In these ecosystems, upheaval brings revival that can be key to some species鈥 survival. Fallen branches provide more cover, nooks, and crannies where animals can take cover. Rotting wood also spurs new growth as it fertilizes the soil. The benefits are significant enough that ecologists suggest authorities refrain from clearing forests of damaged vegetation after severe weather events. Believe it or not the U.S. Forest Service still refers to this as woody 鈥溾 and often burns it.

For some birds, change is salvation. King offers a hopeful anecdote in the form of the , a forest-dwelling bird that faces habitat . In forests, fallen trees give a photosynthetic boost to the lower, shrubby level鈥攁n ecosystem that birds like the whip-poor-will need more than deep, shadowy forest. 鈥淭hey won鈥檛 actually use mature forest,鈥 King says. 鈥淭hey require shrubland.鈥

Once, after a tornado passed through Broomfield, Massachusetts, King recalls that whip-poor-wills populated the area where new shrubland opened up to the sky. Sometimes, new life can spring from nature鈥檚 worst destruction.