Good! And let's try to get some publicity into the Ithaca Journal. BetsySent 
from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: Nancy Cusumano 
<nancycusuman...@gmail.com> Date: 6/15/21  4:28 PM  (GMT-05:00) To: "Kenneth V. 
Rosenberg" <k...@cornell.edu> Cc: Linda Orkin <wingmagi...@gmail.com>, 
CAYUGABIRDS-L <cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu> Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] 
Fields being mowed. Ken, May I use your words in my letters? I think I will go 
straight to the top with this issue. I will paraphrase...NancyOn Tue, Jun 15, 
2021 at 4:07 PM Kenneth V. Rosenberg <k...@cornell.edu> wrote:







Linda, thanks for bringing this mowing to everyone’s attention. In a nutshell, 
what is happening today in those fields, repeated over the entire U.S., is the 
primary cause of continued steep declines in Bobolink
 and other grassland bird populations. 
 
Last year, because of the delays in mowing due to Covid, the fields along 
Freeze and Hanshaw Roads were full of nesting birds, including many nesting 
Bobolinks that were actively feeding young in the nests
 at the end of June. In the first week of July, Cornell decided to mow all the 
fields. Jody Enck and I wrote letters and met with several folks at Cornell in 
the various departments in charge of managing those fields (Veterinary College, 
University Farm Services)
 – although they listened politely to our concerns for the birds, they went 
ahead and mowed that week as dozens of female bobolinks and other birds hovered 
helplessly over the tractors with bills filled food for their almost-fledged 
young.

 
The same just happened over the past couple of days this year, only at an 
earlier stage in the nesting cycle – most birds probably have (had) recently 
hatched young in the nest. While mowing is occurring across
 the entire region as part of “normal” agricultural practices (with continued 
devastating consequences for field-nesting birds), the question is whether 
Cornell University needs to be contributing to this demise, while ostensibly 
supporting biodiversity conservation
 through other unrelated programs. Jody and I presented an alternative vision, 
where the considerable acres of fields owned by the university across Tompkins 
County could serve as a model for conserving populations of grassland birds, 
pollinators, and other
 biodiversity, but the people in charge of this management were not very 
interested in these options.
 
And there we have it, a microcosm of the continental demise of grassland birds 
playing out in our own backyard, illustrating the extreme challenges of modern 
Ag practices that are totally incompatible with
 healthy bird populations. I urge CayugaBirders to make as much noise as 
possible, and maybe someone will listen.
 
KEN
 

Ken Rosenberg (he/him/his)
Applied Conservation Scientist
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
American Bird Conservancy
Fellow, Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future
k...@cornell.edu
Wk: 607-254-2412
Cell: 607-342-4594

 
 

From:
bounce-125714085-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
<bounce-125714085-3493...@list.cornell.edu> on behalf of Linda Orkin 
<wingmagi...@gmail.com>
Date: Tuesday, June 15, 2021 at 3:02 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L <cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Fields being mowed.


After a couple year hiatus in which the Freese Road fields across from the 
gardens have been mowed late in the season allowing at least Bobolinks to be 
done with their nesting and for grassland birds to be lured
 into a false feeling of security so they have returned and I’ve counted three 
singing meadowlarks for the first time in years,  Cornell has returned to early 
mowing there as of today. And so the mayhem ensues. How many more multitudes of 
birds will die before
 we believe our own eyes and ears. Mow the grass while it’s still nutritious 
but are we paying attention to who is being fed. Grass taken from the land to 
pass through animals and in that inefficient process turning to food for humans.


Linda Orkin
Ithaca NY
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