Skip to content
Traffikoz
Menu
  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
Menu

What Does a Black Vulture Over Manhattan Mean for Climate Change?

Posted on March 18, 2023

If you need proof that climate change has altered the wildlife of the city, look no further than the black vultures soaring above Midtown Manhattan. These hulking, baldheaded scavengers have a wingspan that measures nearly five feet and have traditionally inhabited South America, Central the southern United States. But the black vulture seems to be here for the foreseeable future, along with 20 or 30 species that have recently expanded their ranges into New York City. As weather patterns have warped, and habitats have shrunk and food supplies diminished, the migratory patterns of birds have also changed. “It would have been unheard-of,” said Andrew Farnsworth, a researcher at Cornell University’s Lab of Ornithology, to spot a black vulture in Manhattan 30 or 40 years ago. Now, more than 300 sightings have been recorded in the city since March 2022, according to the Cornell-managed citizen-science project eBird. Black vultures are moving north because of milder temperatures an d the ability to scavenge in suburbs near the city, Dr. Farnsworth said. He estimated that as many as 30 new species have joined the more than 200 bird species that regularly spend time in the metro area. Some birds have been harmed by all of the changes; others seem to be adapting. But in a delicately formed ecosystem, the presence of a new species or the disappearance of one can have cascading impacts across the whole habitat. Species like the American robin and the Canada goose are relatively new to spending the winter around New York City, said David Wiedenfeld, a conservation scientist at the American Bird Conservancy. Because snow cover is less prevalent than it once was, these species can stay farther north and feed from the ground even in winter. The populations of both of these birds are growing. In New York Harbor, wading birds like Herons and egrets now have fewer places to go, said Dustin Partridge, director of conservation science for the New York City Audubon Society. The gro up has surveyed wading birds in the area since 1985, and has found that sea level rise, among other factors, may be shrinking the small islands dotting the habitat. In 2000, there were 15 active wading bird colonies in and around the harbor, according to city Audubon data. In 2022, there were just six, the lowest number ever recorded, Dr. Partridge said. Piping plovers — small, dark-eyed shorebirds that nest in the sands of the Rockaways and along other shorelines near the city — face a similar plight. Their habitats are also shrinking, and their nests are threatened by washouts from storms. But even if the planet’s warming is limited to just 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels — the target that scientists say could extremity help avoid the most climate change — the piping plover would still lose more than 60 percent of its summer habitat along the Eastern Seaboard and in the Great Lakes and the Great Plains regions, according to Audubon Society calculations.Earlier springs could bring other challenges for birds. Warblers, for example, have historically passed through New York City by the millions along long spring migratory routes from the Caribbean and South America to Canada. In a changing climate, their food supply along the way — insect — could peak in population before the migrating birds arrive, decreasing their energy stores on a long journey. But at least one warbler may benefit from an earlier spring. A 2013 study found that black-throated blue warblers in New Hampdsshire were hatching — two broo double the usual rate during a single season — because they had begun breeding earlier in the year. A landmark study published in 2019 found that three billion birds had disappeared from North America between 1970 and 2019, a drop of about 30 percent- over a ha century. Although the study did not investigate the decline’s causes, habitat loss and degradation were cited as major factors, along with cats, collisions and pesticide use. In a Times O pinion piece, John W. Fitzpatrick and Peter P. Marra, heads of the Cornell Lab and Georgetown Environment Initiative, described the findings as “a staggering loss that suggests the very fabric of North America’s ecosystem is unraveling.” Beyond climate change, birds in New York City are most immediately threatened by other human actions; between 90,000 and 230,000 migrating birds are killed in building collisions in New York City every year, the city Audubon Society says. Safe places for birds have sex always in the city regeen limited. Spaces like Central Park, Forest Park and Prospect Park are crucial for foraging and shelter. But birds’ needs, which can require fallen leaves and branches to remain in place, are often at odds with the manipulated parks preferred by many New Yorkers. Still, bird-specific conservation has been the subject of city legislation in recent years. In 2019, the City Council passed Local Law 15, requiring new buildings to be made with collision-preventive mat erials. In 2021, the city approved a measure requiring that nonessential lights outside city-owned building be turned off overnight during important migratory periods. The New York City Audubon Society is also pushing lawmakers to expand the ban on extraneous architectural night own private lighting to ed , and it also has lent its support to the Dark Skies Act, a statewide “lights out” bill introduced last year, according to Tod Winston, a researcher with the organization. To Mr. Winston, it is crucial to advocate for birds’ protection before it’s too late. He says the “canary in the coal mine” metaphor is apt when it comes to birds and climate change. “All of our societies depend on these natural systems of insects, birds, plants in multiple ecosystems across the earth, ” Mr. Winston said. The changes affecting birds should serve as a warning, he added, that “people are in trouble,” too.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Imagine T. Rex. Now Imagine It With Lips.
  • What to Watch For as Baseball’s Pitch Clock Era Begins
  • The FTC should investigate OpenAI and block GPT over ‘deceptive’ behavior, AI policy group claims | CNN Business
  • France women’s team taps veteran coach Hervé Renard ahead of World Cup
  • Fiona and Ian Are Retired as Hurricane Names

Recent Comments

  1. admin on Apple reveals iPhone 14 Pro and Watch Ultra

Archives

  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022

Categories

  • Movies & TV
  • News
  • Science & Tech
  • Sports

6aj6i 6aj7k 7ia87 8kajk 73i8 73kau a7ik a7ikc a7jky a7k7u a7khu a7yus a87iau ac7i ag7k ahj7k ak8a8 an7m an7y au7ka au7ks bhas7k bu8k bvu9ik c7a7k c8ka7 c8kao c9hi ca7ijk ca97k caj8k caj8o cb7m ch7i cha9c cj9kl cja8k cja8o cjau9a cjau9m ckal2m cni9l cr7akj cu8ak cua87 cua97k cua98k cua870 cya6i cyha6i cyuia7k d7aij g7iak gbad7u he7ki hey7k hga7ki hja7k hjajk7 hje7k hu76aui j3e8k j298alk j387kj ja6u ja7io ja8o jha7ki k8aui9 ka7i ka7k9 ku7t l2cc mc7k nbaulu t8ik uu38k

©2023 Traffikoz | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme