The Peterborough Examiner

Tracking the travel of nighthawks

Researcher­s have found the journey they take to breed

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON — The whoosh of nighthawk wings is a familiar sound in the Canadian dusk.

Now, scientists have figured out where those enigmatic wings whoosh off to for the winter.

“We have identified where these birds actually go,” said University of Alberta biologist Elly Knight, co-author of a new paper in the Canadian Journal of Zoology.

Nighthawks breed almost everywhere in southern Canada and as far north as central Yukon.

“A lot of people really identify strongly with nighthawks, in a very nostalgic way,” Knight said. “There are a lot of folks from country landscapes that spend time on their back porch, and the sound of the nighthawk they associate with those warm summer nights.”

Still, little is known about them, partly because they’re well camouflage­d during the day and only active at dusk, when they’re hard to see.

“They look a lot like a branch, or the ground,” Knight said.

“But once they break that camouflage, they have these long wings with beautiful markings, and when they open their mouths, they look a little bit like a dinosaur. They have this huge mouth that opens up.”

Their greatest mystery, however, has been their breeding ground. Until now.

Working with the Smithsonia­n Migratory Bird Center, Knight and her colleagues attached tiny, three-gram backpacks to 10 birds north of Fort McMurray, Alta. Those tags fed data to overhead satellites every 10 days, allowing the team to track their migratory path for the first time.

The birds flew south over the Gulf of Mexico to Brazil, where they spent the winter hawking around in the Amazon rainforest and tropical savannah. They then flew back from where they came — an annual round trip of 20,000 kilometres.

“That’s about as much as most people put on their car,” Knight said. “This is an 80-gram bird that’s doing it fuelled by insects.”

What’s more, the nighthawks are so good at navigating that after all that distance, most of them returned to within a kilometre of where they left.

Knight notes that the trackers are mounted with cords that decay after a time, releasing the birds from their burden.

North America has 13 nighthawk population­s. All but one are in decline and the species is considered threatened in Canada and several U.S. states.

What’s behind the decline is poorly understood. Many nighthawks seem perfectly content to breed on agricultur­al land in the nesting range.

Connecting all the dots on their migratory path is a big step toward understand­ing all of the threats faced by the birds, Knight said.

“Understand­ing that connection will help us figure out what conditions they are experienci­ng across what we call their annual cycle, where they’re up north to breed and they migrate through the U.S. through Central America and then overwinter in South America,” she said.

“They’re declining across their range as a whole.”

Most bird species are declining in North America. But birds that eat bugs on the wing are dropping particular­ly quickly.

“That whole group of birds is declining faster than any group of birds in North America,” Knight said.

 ?? ELLY KNIGHT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? University of Alberta researcher Janet Ng holds a nighthawk. She’s part of a team working with the Smithsonia­n Migratory Bird Center that has outfitted 10 birds with tiny GPS backpacks.
ELLY KNIGHT THE CANADIAN PRESS University of Alberta researcher Janet Ng holds a nighthawk. She’s part of a team working with the Smithsonia­n Migratory Bird Center that has outfitted 10 birds with tiny GPS backpacks.

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