Deforestation and Drought in the Tropics Are the Biggest Threats to U.S. Forest Birds

Within 40 years, migratory songbirds will face greater danger where they overwinter in Central America than where they nest, new research says.

When you pick up a field guide and examine the range map of the Tennessee Warbler, it looks as though North America makes up the bulk of its habitat and that it migrates south for a short winter vacation. But the reality is reversed: This forest species, and others like it, spend the majority of the year in Central America鈥攁nd there, it might聽face聽greater threats in the future.

A new study, , found that 21 forest songbirds that breed in North America聽spend 60 percent of the year聽on average聽in their Central American wintering areas. Computer models showed that by 2050 these species will experience more pressure from land-use and climate change in Central America than at their northern breeding grounds, suggesting that these areas require more attention now in order to protect birds throughout the hemisphere.

The new work was led by Frank La Sorte, a research ecologist at the in Ithaca, New York, with a suite of international colleagues. He聽tapped into eBird, a community-driven聽science database he works with at the lab, to better capture how birds spend their time throughout the year. Unlike more traditional databases like the Breeding Bird Survey or the Christmas Bird Count, which combine comprehensive bird counts聽taken on a single day from many locations, eBird provides less-comprehensive data for just about every day of the year from wherever birders report. This allowed him to build a 鈥渃omprehensive, full annual-cycle understanding, instead of just limiting ourselves to little snapshots鈥 of the birds鈥 lives,聽La Sorte says.

The resulting analysis found that 21 species of eastern-flyway forest birds well known to U.S. birders鈥攊ncluding Least Flycatchers, Tennessee Warblers, and Indigo Buntings鈥攕pend up to 200 days per year, on average, at their wintering grounds in Central America.听And they really crammed into聽those southern forests: The migrants occurred in densities three times higher than at their summertime nesting areas.听

The researchers then modeled how changes in聽land-use聽(like converting forest to farmland or homes) and climate (like changes in temperature and rainfall) might affect both breeding and wintering areas by 2050. The computer models showed聽that, within 40 years,聽deforestation on wintering grounds will pose the greatest threat to these migratory species鈥攅ven more so than habitat loss where they breed.

As the birds are squeezed by habitat loss, climate change will alter heat and rainfall, according to the model, potentially making food, water, and shelter聽increasingly unreliable. The model predicted that northern breeding areas will聽heat up more than wintering areas and, at the same time, see more rain or snow in the winter鈥攁 change that might聽improve habitat聽when birds are nesting. In the tropics, though,聽the models predicted less rain聽in summer, which could affect the growing season聽and decrease the quality of habitat (including聽food and shelter)聽by the time聽birds arrive in winter. But because temperature and rainfall are related, it's difficult to predict for certain what the combined impacts on birds and their habitat might be.

La Sorte's work is聽one of the first studies to truly explore the combined threats of climate and land-use change on bird distribution, says Benjamin Zuckerberg, an ecologist at University of Wisconsin, Madison who was not involved in the research.听鈥淭he role of land-use change on overwintering bird habitat is something ornithologists have long been concerned about, but [it] has rarely been captured,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his study showcases the power of citizen science for capturing bird ranges聽and potential environmental threats聽over unprecedented scales of time and space."

The good news is that both threats to wintering grounds鈥攄eforestation and climate change鈥攕hare a common solution: protecting and keeping intact聽as much existing forest as possible. This directly prevents deforestation while ensuring refuge for birds coping with the unpredictability of climate change.听Currently, and聽depending on the country,聽protected areas聽in Central American聽wintering grounds are technically abundant, La Sorte says.听However, many still legally allow harmful activities to some degree, and laws are frequently ignored to pursue intense, destructive purposes such as logging. 鈥淭here's the potential there for people to go in and begin extracting large quantities of resources or converting forest to agricultural grassland without much oversight,鈥 La Sorte says. A聽聽identified another threat: Up to 30 percent聽of annual forest loss in Honduras, Guatemala, and Nicaragua is driven by聽cocaine trafficking鈥攋ust one of many pressures in the region.

Clearly, declaring聽an area off-limits and putting聽a fence around it isn't a realistic solution to protecting聽vital patches of forest. Organizations鈥攇overnmental and non-governmental鈥攏eed to find ways to make forest conservation聽work for local people so that its benefits outweigh聽those of deforestation. Throughout Central and South America, local conservation groups (some in partnership with 探花精选's International Alliances Program)聽are working to foster sustainable聽ecotourism in the region. They're training wildlife guides, developing tour routes, and聽supporting those opening guest houses and offering hospitality鈥攁ll to help them make money and improve their lives by taking care of their forests.听Taking these steps in the short term may prove to be the best long-term strategy to help birds cope with climate change.

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探花精选 conservation programs, like the International Alliances Program and Climate Initiative, support efforts to ensure that birds survive far into the future. To support our work,聽