The Morning Call (Sunday)

Birds fly into Philly skyscraper­s, leaving avid watchers shaken

- By Frank Kummer

Stephen Maciejewsk­i dropped to a knee on a Center City Philadelph­ia sidewalk Wednesday morning and gently scooped up a yellow-billed cuckoo that had smashed into a skyscraper and died on its way to Central America or the West Indies.

“This probably happened yesterday,” said Maciejewsk­i, a 71-year-old retired social worker and volunteer for Audubon Pennsylvan­ia. He labeled a plastic bag with the time, date, and location, tucked the slim migrator into it, and continued his rounds.

Maciejewsk­i gets emotional when he speaks about all the birds he finds, but nothing, he says, prepared him for what happened Oct. 2.

“So many birds were falling out of the sky, we didn’t know what was going on,” he said, choking up. “It was a really catastroph­ic event. The last time something like this happened was in 1948.”

That day, an estimated 1,000 to 1,500 birds flewinto buildings in a 3 ½ -block radius of Center City overnight and into early morning during what Maciejewsk­i called a “perfect storm” of avian calamity. That could mean thousands more likely perished elsewhere in the city, he estimated.

He collected 400 birds between 5 and 8 a.m. in the radius he regularly covers roughly spanning 17th to 19th streets between Market Street and JFK Boulevard — an astonishin­g number, according to an Audubon Pennsylvan­ia official.

“There were so many, I was picking up five at a time,” Maciejewsk­i said. “One guy from building maintenanc­e dumped 75 living and dead birds in front of me as if it were a collection.”

Maciejewsk­i logs each bird, noting its flight path, time, and location of impact.

“There were so many birds I ran out of supplies.”

He can collect only so many birds because building maintenanc­e crews and Center City District workers sweep detritus, including bird bodies, early each morning before commuters arrive. Maciejewsk­i has establishe­d a rapport with some workers whosave birds for him.

“We collected almost 100 birds on one small roof,” he said of the day’s haul.

In the five days after, things returned to normal, and Maciejewsk­i has collected no more than 32 birds a morning.

Why so many birds in one day? Maciejewsk­i and Audubon Pennsylvan­ia can only guess.

“This is complicate­d stuff,” he said.

It appears weather events lined up for the worst during what was likely the peak of migratory birds’ flight from Canada, Maine, upstate New York, and elsewhere toward Central and South America. A sudden plunge in temperatur­es could have prompted the birds to start their flights en masse.

In Philadelph­ia, Oct. 2 brought low cloud cover, light rain, and a full moon, all of which could have pushed the birds lower. Birds flying from remote northern habitats might have little experience with glass.

As they reached Philly in the dark, the birds would have been attracted to the lights inside the buildings. Some of the skyscraper­s have indoor atriums, which could have led birds to think they could land there.

On any given morning, street trees reflect in the glass, making it appear they are inside buildings

Maciejewsk­i began this volunteer effort Sept 1. and will continue through the end of the month. He said he routinely finds the most downed birds near the two Comcast buildings, BNY Mellon Center, and Logan Square, but also just about anywhere. On Wednesday morning, the yellow-billed cuckoo was killed at 15th and Market streets.

Inquirer columnist Inga Saffron has written about the impact of glass buildings on birds. The U.S. House of Representa­tives in July introduced the Bird-Safe Buildings Act of 2019. If approved, it would require buildings to use methods designed to eliminate bird crashes.

“We have to bring people together to make the glass friendlier to birds,” Maciejewsk­i said. “We’re contributi­ng to the extinction of American songbirds.”

Keith Russell, an ornitholog­ist with Audubon Pennsylvan­ia, said he placed the birds Maciejewsk­i collected Friday in a freezer in his Germantown home. The birds will be taken to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel and logged.

Russell said he still hasn’t been able to sort through all the species collected Oct. 2.

“This is a very big issue in the world of bird conservati­on,” Russell said. “The estimates are 350 million to 1 billion birds die every year colliding with buildings.”

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