Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘LITTLE GLOBETROTT­ERS’

New atlas of bird migration shows extraordin­ary journeys

- CHRISTINA LARSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — A bay-breasted warbler weighs about the same as four pennies, but twice a year it makes an extraordin­ary journey. The tiny songbird flies nearly 4,000 miles between Canada’s spruce forests and its wintering grounds in northern South America.

“Migratory birds are these little globetrott­ers,” said Jill Deppe, the senior director of the migratory bird initiative at the National Audubon Society.

A new online atlas of bird migration, published on Thursday, draws from an unpreceden­ted number of scientific and community data sources to illustrate the routes of about 450 bird species in the Americas, including the warblers.

The Bird Migration Explorer mapping tool, available free to the public, is an ongoing collaborat­ion between 11 groups that collect and analyze data on bird movements, including the Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y, Smithsonia­n Migratory Bird Center, the U.S. Geological Survey, Georgetown University, Colorado State University and the National Audubon Society.

For the first time, the site will bring together online data from hundreds of scientific studies that use GPS tags to track bird movements, as well as more than 100 years of bird-banding data collected by USGS, community science observatio­ns entered into Cornell’s eBird platform, genomic analysis of feathers to pinpoint bird origins and other data.

“The past 20 years have seen a true renaissanc­e in different technologi­es to track bird migrations around the world at scales that haven’t been possible before,” said Peter Marra, a bird migration expert at Georgetown University who collaborat­ed on the project.

The site allows a user to enter a species — for instance, osprey — and watch movements over the course of a year. For example, data from 378 tracked ospreys show up as yellow dots that move between coastal North America and South America as a calendar bar scrolls through the months of the year.

Or users can enter the city where they live and click elsewhere on the map for a partial list of birds that migrate between the two locations. For example, ospreys, bobolinks and at least 12 other species migrate between Washington, D.C., and Fonte Boa, Brazil.

As new tracking data becomes available, the site will continue to expand. Melanie Smith, program director for the site, said the next phase of expansion will add more data about seabirds.

Washington, D.C., resident Michael Herrera started bird-watching about four months ago and was quickly hooked.

“It’s almost like this hidden world that’s right in front of your eyes,” he said. “Once you start paying attention, all these details that were like background noise suddenly have meaning.”

Herrera said he’s eager to learn more about the migratory routes of waterbirds in the mid-Atlantic region, such as great blue herons and great egrets.

Georgetown’s Marra hopes that engaging the public will help spotlight some of the conservati­on challenges facing birds, including loss of habitat and climate change.

In the past 50 years, the population of birds in the U.S. and Canada has dropped nearly 30%, with migratory species facing some of the steepest declines.

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Independen­t Record/Thom Bridge) ?? Two bird-watchers photograph thousands of snow geese March 24, 2017, at the Freezeout Lake Wildlife Management Area outside Fairfield, Mont.
(File Photo/AP/Independen­t Record/Thom Bridge) Two bird-watchers photograph thousands of snow geese March 24, 2017, at the Freezeout Lake Wildlife Management Area outside Fairfield, Mont.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Carolyn Kaster) ?? Avian ecologist and Georgetown University Ph.D. student Emily Williams releases an American robin, too light to be fitted with an Argos satellite tag, after gathering samples and data and applying bands on April 28, 2021, in Cheverly, Md.
(File Photo/AP/Carolyn Kaster) Avian ecologist and Georgetown University Ph.D. student Emily Williams releases an American robin, too light to be fitted with an Argos satellite tag, after gathering samples and data and applying bands on April 28, 2021, in Cheverly, Md.
 ?? An osprey (File Photo/AP/Julio Cortez) ?? flies over the Chesapeake Bay on March 29 in Pasadena, Md.
An osprey (File Photo/AP/Julio Cortez) flies over the Chesapeake Bay on March 29 in Pasadena, Md.

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