How Gray Catbirds and Yellow-breasted Chats Help Bridge Cultural Barriers

In order to learn more about the migration of Yellow-breasted Chats and Gray Catbirds that breed in Canada's Okanagan Valley, Kristen Mancuso forged connections with multiple First Nation communities.

As a child,听Kristen聽Mancuso would tie聽loose spools聽of string to crayfish聽in a stream behind her house聽and return to the spool to聽try and figure out where they聽went. 鈥淚t never worked,鈥澛爏he聽laughed, 鈥渂ut that made me realize that I鈥檝e always been interested in movement ecology.鈥澛犅

As a PhD student at the University of British Columbia, Mancuso tracked birds聽across entire continents. However,听she聽had major upgrades to her聽childhood聽equipment.聽Last聽year,听as聽Mancuso聽finished her聽, she聽used聽a combination of聽hydrogen stable isotopes, GPS tags, and聽light-level geolocators聽to track聽Gray Catbirds聽and Yellow-breasted Chats聽that聽breed in the Okanagan Valley.聽Her聽research聽was聽part of an ongoing effort聽to understand where these species move throughout the year and how we can best protect them throughout their full annual cycle.聽

鈥淭he Yellow-breasted Chats聽that breed聽in British Columbia are聽endangered, with only a few hundred breeding pairs. Gray Catbirds breed in similar riparian habitat, but in contrast are聽quite聽common.聽When we started, we had no idea where聽either species聽went聽during migration, which聽provided a great opportunity to compare聽and contrast the聽two species,鈥 she explained.聽聽

The opportunity Mancuso described had been years in the making.聽Mancuso聽joined聽her advisor, Dr. Christine Bishop, as part of聽a聽large聽interdisciplinary team that is the result of key international partnerships聽between聽research聽groups like聽,听,听and聽.聽鈥淚n the Okanagan Valley, often聽the most pristine areas聽of habitat聽are First Nation lands that haven鈥檛 been developed,鈥 explained Mancuso. 鈥淪o, naturally some of聽the key breeding sites聽were on First Nations land.鈥澛燤ancuso and Bishop played a particularly key role in coordinating a relationship between the Penticton Indian Band and the broader Syilx Nation in order to engage both communities in data collection for their research.

As someone who identifies as First Nation, engaging these communities felt particularly important to Mancuso. While tagging birds, she worked closely with the聽聽to follow their cultural procedures. She fondly recalled聽elders, who聽introduced her to the land and said prayers for the birds before tags were deployed. She also hired members of the Penticton Indian Band as part of her research team to regularly monitor the Yellow-breasted Chats. Mancuso was adamant that such collaborations were key to understanding movements of birds, which complete their migrations regardless of our borders. 鈥淎ll these connections came together to better understand the migration ecology of both species,鈥 Mancuso noted.聽

This week, Mancuso and her team published some of聽, which described the full annual cycle for Yellow-breasted Chats. They found that these birds, which breed in the south Okanagan Valley of British Columbia, migrate through the western U.S. to winter in western Mexico. The long list of authors from varied institutions is indicative of the kinds of international partnerships Mancuso described as key to successfully conducting this research. The same is true of the聽, which found that catbirds from the same breeding sites in the Okanagan Valley take long routes through the central U.S. to winter in northeastern Mexico. Mancuso was also excited to share that the Yellow-breasted Chat data聽collected by her team聽suggest some encouraging news: the endangered population seems to be increasing.聽聽聽

While she was excited to publish her findings, she admitted 鈥淚 came into this project mostly focused on the science. But multiple stakeholders being able to come together for the purpose of bird conservation became really important to me.鈥 Mancuso now works as a wildlife biologist with the Okanagan Nation Alliance, where she tracks animals for a living, continuing the professional version of her childhood experiments. While the science is still important to Mancuso, she also sees connecting people as a vital component of conservation.聽聽

Similar to the , to which Mancuso is a data contributor, she hopes that migration research will continue to narrow the gaps not only in our knowledge of bird migration, but also between the people on which birds depend. 鈥淭here are cultural barriers that we need to start bridging if we鈥檙e going to be on the same page for wildlife聽conservation. It鈥檚 been really enriching to engage with other cultures, while being connected by these birds.鈥澛