In autumn of 1792, English ornithologist was prying into an old thatched roof in his town of Selborne, England in search of sleeping birds. He was trying to find out where local swallows disappeared to each winter (he detailed his plight in his journal, now known as the Natural History of Selborne). , too, couldn鈥檛 fathom that birds fly to far-off places like Africa each year: At the time it seemed more logical to assume they just slept underwater for the season. A 17th-century minister and scientist even thought they flew to the moon and back. And Aristotle theorized that Redstarts didn鈥檛 disappear鈥攖hey simply transformed into Robins by winter.
White spent his life in searching for , but it wasn鈥檛 until after he died (in 1793) that modern science revealed that northern birds can fly south each winter in search of a steady food source: 鈥淭hey leave us when this country can no longer furnish them with a supply of their proper and natural food,鈥 natural history author Thomas Bewick in the 1797 edition of A History of British Birds. For European Swallows, this means an epic journey to southern Africa (other birds take on equally heroic distances).
Migrants may inspire us, but they鈥檙e also most vulnerable to environmental degradation: of these globetrotting species have declined in the past 30 years. And according to published in the journal Science yesterday, migratory birds鈥 extensive habitats don鈥檛 receive the same levels of protection from governments and conservation efforts, compared to birds that stay put鈥攏ot necessarily surprising, given how extensive their treks can be, but troubling nonetheless.
鈥淧eople have previously looked at the conservation of a species here and there,鈥 says lead author Claire Runge of the University of Queensland in Australia, 鈥渂ut no one has really put the puzzle pieces together into one big picture like this.鈥
The researchers overlaid maps of protected habitats with maps showing bird distribution and ranges, and discovered that only 9 percent of some 1500 migratory species are properly protected in all of their habitats year-round. By comparison, close to 50 percent of non-migratory birds live in protected areas.
鈥淢igrants are more vulnerable,鈥 Runge says. 鈥淭hey really need protection across both breeding grounds and non-breeding grounds as well as the sites they stop at in between.鈥 Threats in any one spot of their yearly range can influence their entire population, she says.
For example, the is a big shorebird that flies down through Asia to spend its non-breeding season in Australia and New Zealand. In between, Runge says, it gets 鈥渁bsolutely smashed鈥 at a mudflat stopover site in China, which is being rapidly transformed into agricultural land. Mudflats are at a level that 鈥渞ivals the destruction of the Amazon Rainforest,鈥 Runge says, and it鈥檚 preventing the Curlews from being able to refuel on small crabs and molluscs in the area. As a result, the global Curlew population has dipped by in less than 10 years, she says. Similarly, only 7 percent of the range of the , a migratory shorebird that breeds in Russia and winters mainly in Australia, is covered in protected areas鈥攁nd almost disappeared after a critical tidal flat stopover in South Korea was paved over thanks to development.
How to Protect Birds鈥 Entire Habitat
The reason for this conservation mismatch is somewhat obvious: Traditionally, habitat protection is planned at the country level, even though a bird鈥檚 range鈥攑articularly for a long-distance migrator鈥攕pans borders. Because of this, 鈥渋ncreased cooperation is necessary鈥 between countries, argues co-author Hugh Possingham, who is also the Director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions. In Central America, the authors point out, several countries have worked together to create cross-boundary protection plans for more than 75 percent of their migrants, but when these species fly back up to the U.S. and Canada, they鈥檙e heading into unprotected areas. Likewise, in Germany, nearly all of the migrants鈥 habitat is safeguarded鈥攂ut when you consider the birds鈥 entire ranges, that drops down to less than 15 percent of species.
One thing that makes it even trickier to protect birds鈥 full ranges is that scientists still don鈥檛 know where many birds go for the winter. As technology improves, tracking small birds gets easier, as was recently successfully done for the Wood Thrush thanks to the dedication of some 爆料公社 chapters. Similarly, when 爆料公社 Louisiana noticed that their Prothonotary Warbler population was declining more quickly than the bird鈥檚 habitat was disappearing in the U.S., it 鈥済ot us thinking that almost certainly there are threats outside of the U.S. that are contributing to the decline of the population," Erik Johnson, the director of 爆料公社 Louisiana, told 爆料公社 this summer. The team tracked the warbler鈥檚 journey south and discovered that it ends in northern Colombia, where scientists can now target conservation work.
Right now, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a lot of [international] coordination going on across (CMS),鈥 which is a United Nations environmental treaty, Runge says, but funding isn鈥檛 quite robust enough yet. Using already-existing networks like CMS, she says, or , countries like Germany can collaborate with the other half of their native birds鈥 home ranges by meshing together conservation funding and resources.
We now know that when birds take off each year, they鈥檙e relying on the health of other habitats. For birds, the places they visit鈥攁nd the ones they stop in along the way鈥攁re all part of home. It鈥檚 global conservation鈥檚 job now to ensure that home is still safe for landing.