The Day

State’s first comprehens­ive study of birds to take wing

Data meant to help officials allocate conservati­on funds

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer

State officials, biologists and environmen­talists are embarking on a multi-year study of bird population­s and habitats in Connecticu­t in what they say is the first statewide assessment of bird life of its kind.

The last extensive study, or atlas, of birds and where they live happened more than two decades ago, and only collected data about bird species during their nesting seasons, according to Chris S. Elphick, a professor and biologist with the University of Connecticu­t’s Department of Ecology & Evolutiona­ry Biology.

“To do something as comprehens­ive as what we’re doing has never been done before,” Elphick said.

The data collected in the 1980s was compiled in “The Handbook of the Connecticu­t Breeding Bird Atlas,” which was published in 1994 and sits on Elphick’s desk but has not been useful in many years, he said.

“It’s pretty outdated at this point,” he said.

Starting in the spring of 2018, volunteers will collect informatio­n about bird population­s, nesting and breeding habits and migration in one or more 9-kilometer-square plots across Connecticu­t.

The new data will help conservati­on groups and scientists across the state determine where hard-won conservati­on money should be spent, said Connecticu­t Audubon Society Executive Director Patrick Comins.

“It’s really going to help with prioritiza­tion,” Comins said.

Conservati­on groups such as the Audubon Society frequently have to justify why a parcel of land should be conserved, he said, and having more data about which birds frequent those areas could help.

“(We have to say why) we want to protect this parcel or that parcel, and why is it important to birds,” he said. “This might have wood thrush, or this might have cerulean warblers ... or prairie warblers. With the results of the atlas, we’ll really have a much better idea of what the most important areas are. We’ll be able to look at the map and say, these rare species were there ... in the greatest concentrat­ion.”

The Connecticu­t Audubon Society dedicated its annual State of the Birds report to promoting the study, and Comins said he hopes to lead one of several scheduled training sessions for amateurs and ornitholog­ists alike who might want to help.

The Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection and UConn are supporting the study with donations and funds from a federal excise taxes on the sales of firearms and ammunition.

Bird experts and scientists have collected informatio­n about specific species or habitats in specific areas of the state for their own purposes, said Min T. Huang, a DEEP wildlife biologist, but a broader picture has never been accessible to the public, he said.

“A lot of people have been collecting data, but not at this kind of targeted intensity and scope,” he said.

All the data the volunteers collect over the three-year study will be available on an interactiv­e website at www. ctbirdatla­s.org where anyone can access it, Huang said. It will not be published in book form, he said, saving money and allowing the database to be updated even after the study is officially over.

“This will be a really good comprehens­ive look at what’s out there, how much is out there, and what types of habitats they’re really associated with,” he said.

Huang said he also hopes the effort will engage state officials, UConn scientists, bird enthusiast­s and conservati­on groups such as the Connecticu­t Audubon Society and the Connecticu­t Ornitholog­ical Associatio­n in a way that allows them to push for conservati­on and research funding together.

“We have all these organizati­ons, and trusts and other NGO’s and state agencies that all care about our environmen­t,” he said. “Hopefully with that coalition in place, then really we can go out and lobby for and get what the conservati­on community really needs desperatel­y in this state, which is dedicated funding.”

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