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For birds, research presents ray of hope

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Most years, sundown on Sept. 11 finds Susan Elbin standing atop a parking garage in Lower Manhattan. She watches as technician­s turn on dozens of 7,000-watt bulbs to create two brilliant columns of light — an ethereal tribute to the towers that fell there and the people who lost their lives inside them.

Darkness falls, and there’s suddenly movement inside one of the beams, something that dips, whirls and calls out in highpitche­d chirps. Then more shapes appear. They’re birds, circling endlessly inside the columns as though caught in a trance. Elbin and her colleagues count tens of thousands of them over the course of the night.

“You can see the pillars of light sort of filling up with birds, almost like they’re pouring in from the top,” recalled Elbin, director of conservati­on and science at New York City Audubon. “It’s just this combinatio­n of awe and thinking, ‘Gosh, we have to do something to get these birds back on their way.’ ”

In a paper published Monday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, Elbin and her colleagues report the results of their yearly tally: Between 2008 and 2016, roughly 1.1 million migrating birds were affected by the “Tribute in Light” annual installati­on. For some, the attraction was fatal: Unable to escape the thrall of the beams, the birds became disoriente­d and exhausted by hours of mindless spiraling flight. Some simply fell to the ground; others were more likely to strike buildings when the sun rose and they could finally fly away.

The research at the 9/11 tribute illuminate­s the growing hazard posed by artificial light, Elbin says. Accustomed to traveling under the cover of darkness, migratory birds become disoriente­d by the glow from cell towers, flood lights, stadiums, office windows and streetlamp­s.

Yet working with the artists behind the memorial, Elbin and her colleagues found a way to free the birds from the light column spell. Their success could guide other efforts to protect creatures that fly by night.

The Tribute in Light first illuminate­d the skies above New York in spring 2002 and is re-lit each year on the anniversar­y of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. It consists of 88 bulbs arranged in two large squares to create 4mile-high light pillars that can be seen from 60 miles away.

To Elbin, who was working just across the Hudson River when the twin towers were struck 16 years ago, the sight of the beacons was deeply moving. But it also worried her. The anniversar­y of the attacks coincides with most birds’ annual migration south.

“Lower Manhattan is . . . a risky place for birds anyhow,” Elbin said. She and her colleagues often find feathered carcasses of those that flew into the reflective glass windows of the neighborho­od skyscraper­s. Add the disorienti­ng effect of a powerful artificial light, and, Elbin said, “we predicted there would be a problem.”

In 2005, NYC Audubon scientists and volunteers got permission to count the birds caught in the columns from the rooftop, where the bulbs are arrayed. They were joined by researcher­s from the Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y, who could identify the species involved and used radar to understand how far the beacons’ lure extended. Radar imagery of bird density over the tri-state area on Sept. 11-12, 2015 shows a bright red hot spot over the lower part of Manhattan.

According to Kyle Horton, a Cornell ornitholog­ist who was lead author on the paper, scientists don’t know why birds are so mesmerized by light. Research suggests that it may interfere with their ability to detect subtle visual cues, such as starlight, that they use to find their migration routes. Some birds fly to the beams to hunt insects also drawn to the glow.

In recent years, scientists have seen migration paths shift toward light-polluted cityscapes, which harbor countless other hazards for traveling birds — windows, cats, food made toxic by pesticides.

In recent years, scientists have let the memorial’s operators know when too many birds are present in the beams. If the count exceeds 1,000 or if censustake­rs see a creature fall from exhaustion, the lights are turned off one by one until the birds disperse. According to NYC Audubon, survivors of the terrorism attack said the last thing they wanted was for the memorial to be a site of still more death.

“It turned into this camaraderi­e and mutual respect,” Elbin said of the partnershi­p with the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, which now runs the tribute.

The collaborat­ion could inform other efforts to mitigate the effects of light pollution, Horton said. For example, ornitholog­ists are trying to get the beacons on oil rigs and cell towers replaced with flashing lights, which are less likely to entrap birds.

“It’s a very moving opportunit­y, a soulful opportunit­y” to conduct research at New York City’s memorial, Elbin noted.

 ?? KYLE HORTON/CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOG­Y ?? Birds, looking like tiny white specks, fly in the glow of New York City’s annual “Tribute in Light” installati­on.
KYLE HORTON/CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOG­Y Birds, looking like tiny white specks, fly in the glow of New York City’s annual “Tribute in Light” installati­on.
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