TY - JOUR
T1 - High-intensity urban light installation dramatically alters nocturnal bird migration
AU - Van Doren, Benjamin M.
AU - Horton, Kyle G.
AU - Dokter, Adriaan M.
AU - Klinck, Holger
AU - Elbin, Susan B.
AU - Farnsworth, Andrew
N1 - ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We thank Eli Bridge, Wesley Hochachka, Steve Kelling, Jeff Kelly, Frank La Sorte, Felix Liechti, Michael Patten, and Brian Sullivan for review of manuscript drafts; anonymous reviewers provided invaluable comment and criticism. Matt Robbins, Raymond Mack, Christopher Tessaglia-Hymes, and Bioacoustics Research Program staff assisted with development, deployment, and operation of autonomous acoustic recording units. Graham Taylor provided information about flight energetics. John Rowden and Debra Kriensky coordinated volunteers for New York City Audubon. Special thanks to Michael Ahern, Jared Abramson, Jennifer Hellman, Massimo Moratti, Dorian Cynajko, and Olivia Egger for TiL logistical support. Support was provided by National Science Foundation Grant IIS-1125098 (to A.F. and B.M.V.D.), National Science Foundation Grant EF-1340921 (to K.G.H.), the Leon Levy Foundation (A.F. and S.B.E.), the Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission (B.M.V.D.), and a Cornell Lab of Ornithology Edward W. Rose Postdoctoral Fellowship and NASA Grant NNX14AC41G (to A.M.D.).
PY - 2017/10/17
Y1 - 2017/10/17
N2 - Billions of nocturnally migrating birds move through increasingly photopolluted skies, relying on cues for navigation and orientation that artificial light at night (ALAN) can impair. However, no studies have quantified avian responses to powerful ground-based light sources in urban areas. We studied effects of ALAN on migrating birds by monitoring the beams of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum’s “Tribute in Light” in New York, quantifying behavioral responses with radar and acoustic sensors and modeling disorientation and attraction with simulations. This single light source induced significant behavioral alterations in birds, even in good visibility conditions, in this heavily photopolluted environment, and to altitudes up to 4 km. We estimate that the installation influenced ≈1.1 million birds during our study period of 7 d over 7 y. When the installation was illuminated, birds aggregated in high densities, decreased flight speeds, followed circular flight paths, and vocalized frequently. Simulations revealed a high probability of disorientation and subsequent attraction for nearby birds, and bird densities near the installation exceeded magnitudes 20 times greater than surrounding baseline densities during each year’s observations. However, behavioral disruptions disappeared when lights were extinguished, suggesting that selective removal of light during nights with substantial bird migration is a viable strategy for minimizing potentially fatal interactions among ALAN, structures, and birds. Our results also highlight the value of additional studies describing behavioral patterns of nocturnally migrating birds in powerful lights in urban areas as well as conservation implications for such lighting installations.
AB - Billions of nocturnally migrating birds move through increasingly photopolluted skies, relying on cues for navigation and orientation that artificial light at night (ALAN) can impair. However, no studies have quantified avian responses to powerful ground-based light sources in urban areas. We studied effects of ALAN on migrating birds by monitoring the beams of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum’s “Tribute in Light” in New York, quantifying behavioral responses with radar and acoustic sensors and modeling disorientation and attraction with simulations. This single light source induced significant behavioral alterations in birds, even in good visibility conditions, in this heavily photopolluted environment, and to altitudes up to 4 km. We estimate that the installation influenced ≈1.1 million birds during our study period of 7 d over 7 y. When the installation was illuminated, birds aggregated in high densities, decreased flight speeds, followed circular flight paths, and vocalized frequently. Simulations revealed a high probability of disorientation and subsequent attraction for nearby birds, and bird densities near the installation exceeded magnitudes 20 times greater than surrounding baseline densities during each year’s observations. However, behavioral disruptions disappeared when lights were extinguished, suggesting that selective removal of light during nights with substantial bird migration is a viable strategy for minimizing potentially fatal interactions among ALAN, structures, and birds. Our results also highlight the value of additional studies describing behavioral patterns of nocturnally migrating birds in powerful lights in urban areas as well as conservation implications for such lighting installations.
KW - Artificial light
KW - Flight calls
KW - Nocturnal migration
KW - Radar ornithology
KW - Remote sensing
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1708574114
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1708574114
M3 - Article
C2 - 28973942
AN - SCOPUS:85031325762
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 114
SP - 11175
EP - 11180
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 42
ER -