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Media contact: David Bonter
607/254-2457,
email
Photos available at bottom of page.
The
mystery of the disappearing grosbeaks
Bird
lovers needed to help understand declines
Ithaca,
NY, October, 2006-- The Evening Grosbeak is an enigma.
Many people who used to see these raucous birds descend
on their feeders in large numbers now report that they haven’t
spotted one in years. Reports from volunteers who count
the birds at their feeders as part of Project FeederWatch,
a bird-monitoring program coordinated by the Cornell Lab
of Ornithology and Bird Studies Canada, show that grosbeaks
are indeed declining. In fact, grosbeaks are completely
missing from many areas where they were common as recently
as the early 1990s.
Questions about Evening Grosbeaks began more than a century
ago when these birds rapidly expanded their range from western
North America to include many areas in the East. The range
expansion brought these gluttons to feeders all across the
northern half of the continent by the 1950s. Noisy flocks
would routinely visit backyard bird feeders and devour sunflower
seeds. Grosbeaks were one of the most common species reported
to Project FeederWatch when the program began in 1987. Now,
nearly 20 years later, Evening Grosbeaks have fallen off
of the list of most common feeder birds in most regions.
The Evening Grosbeak is a yellow, black, and white finch
with a bill that appears too big for its body. Its winter
range typically covers the entire northern half the United
States and it is found year-round in many western states
and southern Canada. Evening Grosbeaks are an irruptive
species, meaning their migration is irregular, linked to
the availability of food. They may be abundant in an area
one year and nearly nonexistent the next. However, the long-term
trend shows that these irruptions have almost ceased in
many areas of the East, and declines have been documented
in their core western range as well.
The reasons for the decline are unclear—are the birds
dying, are they failing to reproduce, or are they simply
moving elsewhere? Scientists are not sure, but bird watchers
may help unravel the mystery by counting birds at their
own feeders and submitting information to Project FeederWatch.
Participants report all of the birds seen, so researchers
can learn where grosbeaks are found, as well as where they
are missing. Participants may submit reports as often as
once per week from November to April. Everyone is invited
to participate.
The more eyes looking out for grosbeaks and other birds,
the better! Anyone interested in signing up for Project
FeederWatch in the United States can do so online at www.birds.cornell.edu/pfw
or call the Lab toll-free at (800) 843-2473. In Canada,
contact Bird Studies Canada at (888) 448-2473. For the $15
participation fee ($35 Canadian), participants receive the
FeederWatcher’s Handbook, a poster of the most common
feeder birds, a subscription to the Lab’s newsletter,
BirdScope, instructions, a calendar, and the FeederWatch
report, Winter Bird Highlights.
Note:
The following photos may be published along with the press
release without further permission. Other uses are prohibited.
Please provide photographer credits. Contacts with local
participants may be available upon request. Contact David
Bonter at (607) 254-2457 or email.
Click
on photos to enlarge.
Evening Grosbeak by Tammie Haché.

Evening
Grosbeak by Patricia Healy.

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