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Science Quickly

Why Some Birds Are Likely To Hit Buildings

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 14 July 2020

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Those that eat insects, migrate or usually live in the woods are most likely to fly into buildings that feature a lot of glass. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

May I have your attention please you can now book your train tickets on Uber and get

0:08.0

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0:15.0

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0:20.0

This is scientific Americans 60 Second Science. I'm Jason Goldman.

0:28.6

About a billion birds die from flying into buildings each year in North America.

0:35.0

Suspicions have been that birds may perceive the open areas behind glass as safe passageways.

0:41.0

Or they may mistake the reflected foliage for the real thing.

0:46.3

Researchers would like to reduce collisions, which requires a solid understanding about what makes

0:51.0

a bird more or less likely to die by snacking into a building in the first place.

0:56.0

There was, and still is, relatively little known at a broad scale.

1:00.0

Most studies are at one small study site.

1:03.0

Jared Elmore, a graduate student in natural resource ecology and management at Oklahoma State University.

1:10.0

He and his colleagues used a previously created data set of building collisions for birds at 40 sites throughout Mexico, Canada, and the U.S.

1:20.0

The first finding was obvious. Bigger buildings with more glass kill more birds.

1:25.5

But the details were more noteworthy. We found that life history predicted collisions,

1:31.0

migrants, insectivores, and woodland inhabiting species collided more than their counterparts.

1:37.0

Most migratory species travel at night when lights near buildings can distract or disorient them.

1:44.0

And Elmore thinks that insect eating birds might be attracted to buildings because their insect

1:49.1

prey is attracted to the lights.

1:51.4

He suspects that woodland species get fooled by the reflections of trees and

1:55.4

shrubs in the windows. The results are in the journal Conservation Biology. By understanding

2:01.8

which birds are more likely to collide with buildings,

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