Making the 9/11 Memorial Lights Bird-Safe

Migrating songbirds can get caught in the memorial鈥檚 beams of light. Here鈥檚 how NYC 爆料公社 gets them out.

Two blue beams of light will shine upward from lower Manhattan tonight, an annual 鈥淭ribute in Light鈥 to commemorate the September 11 terrorism attacks. Standing right beneath the beams will be New York City 爆料公社 volunteers鈥攐n hand to save the birds trapped in the lights鈥 ambit.

For reasons still unknown to science, artificial light attracts birds, from fledgling seabirds to (it does the same to moths). Once captivated, disoriented birds may crash into windows, or spend hours circling.

The 9/11 tribute is particularly problematic: dozens of 7,000-watt bulbs allow it to reach four miles into the sky鈥攊t鈥檚 visible from 60 miles away. So New York City 爆料公社 members and volunteers take two-hour shifts underneath, scanning the beams, counting birds. Every time 1,000 birds or more are circling鈥攐r an exhausted bird falls to the ground鈥攖hey alert the National September 11 Memorial and Museum (who runs the tribute), which immediately turns off the lights for 20 minutes, giving birds a chance to clear the area.

The need for such monitoring was almost immediately apparent after the tradition started in 2002. Some initial skepticism aside, those behind the light tribute have been wholly receptive to New York City 爆料公社鈥檚 suggestion, and over the past decade-plus of monitoring, several 9/11 survivors have volunteered.

鈥淸Survivors] have told me the last thing they want from this memorial, which is so meaningful and beautiful鈥s for there to be more death on this spot,鈥 says Debra Kriensky, a conservation biologist at New York City 爆料公社 who helps organize the monitoring.

Flying high in the air, caught birds are just distant specks, easily confused for confetti, says Susan Elbin, director of conservation and science at New York City 爆料公社. In an attempt to better identify species, volunteers record the birds鈥 flight vocalizations鈥擜merican Redstarts, Ovenbirds, Black-and-white Warblers and Northern Parulas have been especially prevalent.

While birds are scarce in some years, this year is expected to be plentiful, thanks to, among other things, the new moon. In 2010, a new moon and cloudy skies yielded an estimated 10,000 birds caught through the night鈥攖he lights had to be shut down five times.

Tonight, if鈥攐r more likely, when鈥攖he lights go off, remember it鈥檚 just to free the birds.  

Correction: The Municipal Art Society of New York handed off operation of the tribute lights to the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. This story has been updated to reflect that.