Study: Starvation and a Freak Snow Storm Caused the Southwest’s Mass Bird Die-Off

A record death event during fall migration sent experts scurrying for an explanation. In the lab results, they see a common factor: climate change.

Earlier this fall,聽when聽injured and dead migratory聽birds 聽on roadsides, in backyards, and along waterways聽across the southwestern U.S.,聽researchers acted fast. Wildlife biologists from New Mexico State University聽documented the many species聽caught up in the event鈥攆rom warblers to woodpeckers, hummingbirds to loons鈥攁nd collected carcasses for further study. Biologists at the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish sent those bodies聽to federal laboratories, hoping聽for insights into聽the cause of death. And then, they waited.

Now, after nearly three months, shed more light on聽what scientists call聽an 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 die-off at the time.聽

The findings released this month by the U.S. Geological Survey鈥檚 National Wildlife Health Center ruled out poisoning, disease, and parasites as causes of death. Instead, lab scientists聽found聽one major commonality among nearly all the dead birds: severe starvation. The聽carcasses聽shared signs of malnourishment, including empty stomachs, depleted fat stores, dehydration, and emaciation. But while it鈥檚聽clear that hunger played a big part in the die-off,聽that's not the whole story.

One probable cause of the birds鈥櫬爏tarvation was a聽severe drought聽in the region over the summer and into聽fall which聽made聽food and water scarce. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been extremely dry here this year, so seed production is low and insect numbers are low,鈥 says聽Martha Desmond, an avian ecologist at New Mexico State who helped聽to coordinate the rapid-response research effort after the die-off. Without adequate fuel, these birds were likely already in poor body condition when they arrived in the Southwest on their migrations,聽according to Desmond.聽Then came the storm.

An unseasonal cold snap聽rolled into the Southwest on Labor Day, and its wintry聽temperatures, high winds, and snow stayed in the area through most of the week. Kerry Mower, a wildlife disease specialist with New Mexico鈥檚 game and fish department, says the storm could have caused deaths in multiple ways. Some birds聽likely flew lower due to the storm,聽became disoriented, and聽died from striking buildings and other objects.聽Meanwhile, the majority of malnourished birds聽landed wherever they could鈥攚ith deadly results. 鈥淎 lot of birds in that kind of weather can鈥檛 do anything except land on the ground,鈥 Mower says. 鈥淢any birds got caught in the snow and ice storm, and probably froze to death right there on the ground.鈥

While聽drought and the early snowstorm seem to be聽the major contributors to the die-off,聽fire might聽have also played a role. At the time, severe wildfires burned across the western U.S. Although lab results ruled out physical damage from smoke as a factor in most birds, Mower and others note that the fires could聽have contributed to聽some of these deaths by pushing聽migrants聽off their course and even toward the storm. 鈥淭he birds could have been altering their migration path to avoid smoke plumes, thereby increasing the energy demand of their migration and causing exhaustion,鈥 Jon Hayes, executive director of , says. 鈥淭he evidence they鈥檝e shown聽regarding poor body condition could still fit that scenario, and so I think there鈥檚 still questions like the role of fire in particular.鈥

Despite some lingering questions, Hayes and Desmond say they have no doubt聽that a changing climate played a part. 鈥淣othing in the new information changes my opinion that the ultimate driver of this is changing weather patterns in the West聽that are easily linked to climate change,鈥 Hayes says. Birds in the Southwest聽survive聽鈥渙n the margins,鈥 he says, and聽the region鈥檚 rising temperatures, larger wildfires, and stronger storms add further stress.聽In other words, this fall鈥檚 gruesome mass-mortality event may have been without precedent, but it likely won鈥檛 be the last.