| Silent Spring Happening Now at a Forest Near You |
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| Written by Jeanne Roberts | |
| Monday, 24 March 2008 | |
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A 2008 report from Canada shows an alarming decrease in insect-eating species of birds. The decline is most notable in Canada, but also affects the entire Northern Hemisphere – particularly the Northeast – with some species suffering a 70 percent decline in the last 40 years. The report's author, Jon McCracken, cites a number of possible causes, including loss of habitat and even natural variability. The most likely cause, according to McCracken, is the change in density of the insects the birds feed on. If this is the case, the decline has significant ecological and socio-economic implications, since not only do these bird species control crop-devouring insects, they also pollinate crops. Other causes likely include pesticides and global warming.
This result, which ecologists call the trophic cascade, shows that birds are top-level predators and can significantly impact the health of forests. Forests, as we all know, protect the environment by absorbing carbon dioxide and providing oxygen. Forest fragmentation, or urban sprawl, is likely one cause of bird decline. Landscape ecologists say only 3-5% of all US land is undisturbed.
The alpine butterfly, native to mountainous regions in the U.S. and Canada, is being impacted by the rise in timberline (the altitude beyond which trees are not commonly found). Timberline advance is solely due to global warming. Farming and land settlement, including such simple tasks as mowing tall grass, further reduce butterfly populations with surprising rapidity, since many common butterflies lay their eggs in native grasslands. In 2005, Monarch populations were reported down 75 percent, with the U.S. blaming Mexico's logging industry, and vice versa. A year later, Wildlife Extra warned that Monarch populations would likely be reduced even farther by drought conditions in Texas and S. Oklahoma as a result of warmer-than-usual weather. Ninety-six percent of North American birds rely on insects to feed their young.
Disclosure: I don't own stock in any company associated with pesticides. Site Disclaimer
Comments
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written by Deb , March 26, 2008
I've also noticed the lack of birds. I was looking out the kitchen window yesterday and wondering where are the early spring birds? Don't they usually arrive by now? Or am I mistaken, and they'll be here any day now? Maybe a few of them will be back, but as we both know there are less seasonal birds arriving each year. It just makes one fell sadness and regret. We knew this day could come, but the reality of it, the chilling finality of it is something hard to take. Thanks for the informative, well-written article!
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