Edmonton Journal

Oilpatch causes sparrows to sing a new tune

Messages crucial for survival of songbirds

- Bob weber

Noisy oilpatch equipment is causing songbirds to change their tune, concludes research from the University of Manitoba.

“It’s something that is really picking up, the idea of noise pollution,” said Miya Warrington, a co-author of a new paper in Condor, the journal of the American Ornitholog­ical Society. “We want to see what is that doing for the birds.”

Warrington looked at savannah sparrows, a small, common, thick-beaked sparrow with a splash of yellow over the eye. Its complex song has up to nine different “syllables” that convey a lot of informatio­n.

Some parts of the song deliver a territoria­l warning. Others advertise for mates. Others just say, “I am here.” All are crucial messages for the sparrow’s survival. Each bird has an individual version of the song, which includes elements from a highpitche­d trill to an insectlike buzz.

These days, however, sparrows share the prairies with a lot of noisy machinery. Oil and gas infrastruc­ture is common on the plains and Warrington wanted to see how birdsong competes with it.

“You can hear birds clearly when it’s quieter,” she said. “When you’re closer to the infrastruc­ture, you don’t hear the birds as clearly.

“You start to think, if I can’t hear, maybe the birds can’t hear.”

She looked at 26 sites around Brooks in southern Alberta. The sites contained four types of energy infrastruc­ture: natural gas compressor­s, pumpjacks, screw pumps powered by the electrical grid and screw pumps powered by generators.

She recorded and analyzed the songs of 73 male sparrows between the months of May and July and compared them with the songs of sparrows where there were no oilpatch facilities.

The analysis showed that all pumps and compressor­s made sounds on the same frequencie­s as at least part of the sparrow’s song. Recordings revealed the birds were adjusting parts of their songs, depending on the source of the background noise.

“All syllable types were significan­tly affected by at least one infrastruc­ture type,” the paper says.

In some cases, sparrows sang the entire song at higher frequencie­s, as if they’d transposed it to a higher key.

Of the four types of infrastruc­ture, generator-powered screw pumps had the most impact while natural gas compressor­s had the least.

Warrington suggests the birds made changes in efforts to be heard over the sound of the equipment.

“The birds are modifying their birdsong in response to the noise that’s created by this oil and natural gas infrastruc­ture.” Avian response to human noise is a hot topic in the bird research world.

Another paper in the same issue of Condor looks at how grouse adjust their mating calls in the presence of sound from wind turbines. Urban birds have also been shown to raise the pitch of their songs in noisy city environmen­ts.

The issue is particular­ly pressing for grassland birds such as sparrows. While almost all songbirds are in decline, grassland species are declining the quickest.

“They’ve actually been looking at a whole lot of grassland species and finding that, in some species, the presence of oil infrastruc­ture is affecting reproducti­on while in others it’s not.”

YOU CAN HEAR BIRDS CLEARLY WHEN IT’S QUIETER. WHEN YOU’RE CLOSER TO THE INFRASTRUC­TURE, YOU DON’T HEAR THE BIRDS AS CLEARLY. YOU START TO THINK, IF I CAN’T HEAR, MAYBE THE BIRDS CAN’T HEAR. — RESEARCHER MIYA WARRINGTON

 ?? MIKE DREW / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Researcher Miya Warrington analyzed male savannah sparrows’ songs near oilpatch equipment around Brooks.
MIKE DREW / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Researcher Miya Warrington analyzed male savannah sparrows’ songs near oilpatch equipment around Brooks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada