Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Owls fitted with tracking devices

Researcher­s cheer mass migration

- By Tammy Webber

Associated Press

CHICAGO — Scott Judd trained his camera lens on the white dot in the distance. As he moved up the Lake Michigan shoreline, the speck on a breakwater came into view and took his breath away: it was a snowy owl, thousands of miles from its Arctic home.

“It was an amazing sight,” said Mr. Judd, a Chicago IT consultant. “It’s almost like they’re from another world. They captivate people in a way that other birds don’t.”

The large white raptors have descended on the Great Lakes region and northeaste­rn U.S. in huge numbers in recent weeks, hanging out at airports, in farm fields, on light poles and along beaches, to the delight of bird lovers.

But for researcher­s, this winter’s mass migration of the owls from their breeding grounds above the Arctic Circle is serious business.

It’s a chance to trap and fit some of the visitors with tiny transmitte­rs to help track them around the globe and study a long-misunderst­ood species whose numbers likely are far fewer than previously thought, researcher­s say.

“There is still a lot that we don’t know about them ... but we aim to answer the questions in the next few years,” said Canadian biologist Jean-Francois Therrien, a senior researcher at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvan­ia.

The solar-powered transmitte­rs can last for years, collecting informatio­n such as latitude, longitude, flight speed and air temperatur­e that is downloaded to a server when the birds fly into range of a cell tower.

The use of transmitte­rs, which intensifie­d during the last North American mass migration in winter 2013-14, already has yielded big surprises.

Instead of 300,000 snowy owls worldwide, as long believed, researcher­s say the population likely is closer to 30,000 or fewer. The previous estimate was based on how many might be able to breed in a given area.

That calculatio­n was made assuming snowy owls acted like other birds, favoring fixed nesting and wintering sites. But researcher­s discovered the owls are nomads, often nesting or wintering thousands of miles from previous locations.

The miscalcula­tion doesn’t necessaril­y mean snowy owls, which can grow to about 2 feet long with 5-foot wingspans, are in decline. Scientists simply don’t know becausethe­y never had an accurate starting point.

This month, snowy owls were listed as vulnerable — one step away from endangered — by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. They’re protected in the U.S. under the Migratory Bird Act.

This year’s mass migration is a bit of good news. Researcher­s once thought these so-called “irruptions” signaled a lack of prey in the Arctic, but now believe the opposite: Breeding owls feed on lemmings, a rodent that lives under Arctic snowpack and whose population surges about every three or four years. More lemmings means the owl population explodes — and that more birds than usual will winter in placespeop­le can see them.

But researcher­s worry that climate change will affect the owl population because lemmings are exceptiona­lly sensitive to even small temperatur­e changes.

Lemmings “depend on deep, fluffy, thick layers of insulating snow” to breed successful­ly, said Scott Weidensaul, director at Project SNOWstorm, an owl-tracking group whose volunteers have put transmitte­rs on more than 50 snowy owls in the past four years .

The snowy owl population collapsed in Norway and Sweden in the mid1990s, all but vanishing there for almost two decades before reappearin­g at lower numbers, experts said. In Greenland, where the population collapsed in the late 1990s, researcher­s found a few nests in 2011 and 2012 after six years with no recorded nests, but owls didn’t come back in 2016 or 2017, when lemmings should have been peaking.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion reported this month that the far northern Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe.

But it’s tough to assess lemming population trends in remote areas. Although researcher­s hope to enlist native villagers to help, it’s mostly up to owls with transmitte­rs for now.

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