With many bird populations in decline, two recent studies out of Colorado State University used weather radar to track the movements of swallows and martins to gain clues into how climate change and roost size affect their roosting habits.
Maria Belotti is a PhD student who contributed to both studies, which relied on 21 years of data collected by weather surveillance radar stations in the Great Lakes region.
If the climate is changing, they need to change their seasonality and if theyre not doing that, then we have a problem, she said.
In a published in the journal Global Change Biology in November, Belotti and her colleagues showed that peak roosting activity had changed by a little over 2 days per decade in the region, likely caused by insects emerging earlier in the season due to climate change.
Belotti says a shortened roosting season could have health implications for birds as they prepare for migrations and create a domino effect that also harms the predators dependent on them.
Understanding what is driving changes of this behavior throughout the years is likely to help us figure out why these species have been facing declines and what we can do to stabilize their populations, Belotti was quoted as saying in a .
The , published last month in the journal Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation, looked at whether the size of a roost has anything to do with the locations popularity within a season or year after year. Turns out, larger roosts gather more regularly in the same place, but more birds join smaller groups. Belotti wonders if the size of the roost could impact birds survival.
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