« The *Z* Birds! | Main | Tips for Summer Travel! »

May 17, 2007

West Nile Virus Decimates Suburban Birds

Birds that once flourished in suburban skies, including robins,
bluebirds and crows, have been devastated by West Nile virus, a study found.

Populations of seven species have had dramatic declines across the continent
since West Nile emerged in the United States in 1999, according to a
first-of-its-kind study. The research, to be published Thursday by the
journal Nature, compared 26 years of bird breeding surveys to quantify what
had been known anecdotally.

"We're seeing a serious impact," said study co-author Marm Kilpatrick, a
senior research scientist at the Consortium of Conservation Medicine in New
York.

West Nile virus, which is spread by mosquito bites, has infected 23,974
people in confirmed cases since 1999, killing 962, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.

But the disease, primarily an avian virus, has been far deadlier for birds.
The death toll for crows and jays is easily in the hundreds of thousands,
based on the number dead bodies found and extrapolated for what wasn't
reported, Kilpatrick said.

It hit the seven species _ American crow, blue jay, tufted titmouse,
American robin, house wren, chickadee and Eastern bluebird _ hard enough to
be scientifically significant. Only the blue jay and house wren bounced
back, in 2005.

The hardest-hit species has been the American crow. Nationwide, about
one-third of crows have been killed by West Nile, said study lead author
Shannon LaDeau, a research scientist at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird
Center in Washington. The species was on the rise until 1999.

In some places, such as Maryland, crow loss was at 45 percent, and around
Baltimore and Washington, 90 percent was gone, LaDeau said.

While crows are scavengers and often disliked, they play a key role in
nature by cleaning up animal carcasses, LaDeau noted. Researchers will next
look into what species benefit from the disappearance of crows.

Researchers noted the die-offs came in patches, with many in some places and
none in others. Maryland appeared to be the epicenter of bird deaths, though
that was partly because the data were not as good from New York, where the
virus first hit, LaDeau said.

Chickadees, Eastern bluebirds and robins in Maryland were 68 percent, 52
percent, and 32 percent below expected levels in 2005. Tufted titmouse
populations in Illinois were one-third of what they were expected to be.

"It tends to be more suburban areas. Some of the common backyard species
including the blue jays, the robins, the chickadees have suffered
significant declines," LaDeau said. "That heavily packed urban corridor is a
bad place to be a bird. The reason for that is that the mosquito prefers
human landscape. They do very well in suburbia."

The birds act as an early warning system for humans, said Wesley Hochachka,
assistant director of bird population studies at Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

"If you start seeing crows dying and dying in numbers, that means there
could be a human outbreak," said Hochachka, who was not involved with the
study.

The researchers looked at 20 species that were regularly counted each
breeding season and found that populations of 13 species were not down
because of West Nile. Biologists say they have seen other species with many
deaths, including owls, hawks, sage grouse and yellow-billed magpies, but
there are no breeding surveys to quantify how bad the problem has been.

Although entire small clusters of crows were "wiped out by West Nile virus
in a single season," Greg Butcher, director of bird conservation at the
National Audubon Society, remained hopeful.

"All of those (bird populations) have the capacity to rebound," he said.

Posted by sue at May 17, 2007 09:32 AM

Comments