The Guardian (USA)

Voted for bird of the year? Now make your avian affection really count

- Sean Dooley

Recently I visited Tokyo for the first time and was immediatel­y struck by the bird calls I would hear at each train station. In an urban conglomera­tion of 37 million people, it was a pleasant surprise to think birds were thriving. But when I heard the distinctiv­e two-note call of a cuckoo, I became suspicious.

It was then that I discovered that they piped in bird sounds to help visually impaired people navigate the extremely busy stations. In the vast megapolis itself there were very few birds. With the lack of rubbish on the streets, there were hardly even any pigeons or crows compared with Australian cities.

The lack of genuine background bird noise began to unnerve me. Several recent studies have shown how important birdsong can be for our physical and mental health. Having grown up with the sounds of magpies caroling and wattlebird­s squawking, the most foreign aspect of Japan for me was not the language, culture or food, but the avian silence.

This was brought home when I recorded a greater number of bird species when transferri­ng between the internatio­nal and domestic terminals at Brisbane airport on returning home than I would in an entire day in Tokyo. And boy, were they loud – rainbow lorikeets, noisy miners and figbirds all yammering away. They may have been “songless bright birds” to Adam Lindsay Gordon and his colonial mates, but the inner joy this Aussie soundtrack brings is incalculab­le.

The Japanese seem to get around this in typically efficient fashion by compartmen­talising nature through a series of stunning parks and forests. That forest bathing has become so popular is not surprising. However, here in Australia we are still fortunate enough to have substantia­l – if dwindling – slices of nature, even in our largest cities.

As the phenomenal response to the 2023 Australian bird of the year poll demonstrat­es, the opportunit­y to connect with birds on a daily basis has not been denied us quite yet. When you look at the birds that made it through to the Top 10, it was not so much the exotic-looking and bizarre birds but those that are encountere­d in the places where we live. Even the two most endangered – Carnaby’s blackcocka­too and swift parrot – can be found on the outskirts of our capital cities, such as Perth, where Carnaby’s is a familiar site, and Hobart, Melbourne and Sydney, where swift parrots will feed on flowering street trees. Even the Gouldian finch of the tropical savannas has recently been making an appearance on the outskirts of Darwin at a site under threat of being cleared for housing developmen­t.

Australian­s clearly connect with the birds with whom they share their neighbourh­oods. As much as the bird of the year vote is a bit of fun, there’s something uplifting about the celebratio­n of the birds we all know. As the poll closes, many are wondering how to get their next fun bird fix.

Fortunatel­y, there is a way. Starting on 16 October is the 10th edition of the Aussie Bird Count, a citizen science event initiated by BirdLife Australia. Each October, close to 100,000 people provide us with a snapshot of the birds they see in the places where they spend their days – the back yard, the local park, pond, beach or workplace. Each of the 20-minute surveys entered in the app is a pixel that allows us to build a clearer picture of how our most common birds are faring.

Now that we are approachin­g 10 years, we are starting to see some trends emerge. Confirming other research by BirdLife Australia’s Urban Birds Program and other research institutio­ns, the Aussie Bird Count results show that for birds, as with their human counterpar­ts, competitio­n for urban real estate is brutal, leaving a few highly successful winners and an increase in the proportion of those facing homelessne­ss. Larger, more aggressive birds such as rainbow lorikeets, noisy miners, ravens, crows, magpies and butcherbir­ds are all thriving. Smaller, once common bush birds such as silvereyes and willie wagtails are in decline.

We wouldn’t necessaril­y know that these are the trends facing our common birds without the breadth of citizen science coverage that something like the Aussie Bird Count can provide. You can’t solve a problem you don’t know you have. Gaining as clear a picture as possible, thanks to the efforts of those who are just out doing what they love in watching birds, means we can develop strategies to plan our cities and manage our urban landscapes. And that gives us the best possible chance to continue to be surrounded by real birdsong, to avoid having to resort to a muzak version played through public loudspeake­rs.

The 2023 Aussie Bird Count runs 16-22 October. To register go to aussiebird­count.org.au

Sean Dooley is national public affairs manager for BirdLife Australia

 ?? Decline.’ Photograph: Auscape/UIG/Getty Images ?? ‘Smaller, once common bush birds such as silvereyes [pictured] and willie wagtails are in
Decline.’ Photograph: Auscape/UIG/Getty Images ‘Smaller, once common bush birds such as silvereyes [pictured] and willie wagtails are in

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