Well said.

 

Ira Sanders

Golden, CO

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Amber Carver
Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 7:40 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Paula Hansley; [email protected]
Subject: [cobirds] Re: Too bad birders can read...

 

I wanted to add my two-cents worth on this interesting conversation.  There are 
a few points that I think previous respondents have not addressed.  One is that 
migration is an incredibly complex phenomenon, and though a great deal of 
research has gone into understanding it, no one can claim to know exactly what 
prompts individual birds to get up and go. Birding experience and historical 
records can help you guess, but individual birds show up in odd places all the 
time. This may occur more and more with changes to habitat and climate, which 
are happening blisteringly fast. What we know about migration patterns in the 
recent past might not tell us much about what's going to happen in the near 
future. Birds do not have time to evolve in response to global climate change, 
and they may respond in unpredictable ways. Lastly, a response to the comment 
that "neotropical migrants have no way of knowing that conditions may be 
suitable on their breeding grounds when they are thousands of miles away."  To 
this I say that we also have to consider the changes occurring on the wintering 
ground. I don't pretend to know how warming temperatures, shifting rain 
patterns, and a loss of habitat on the wintering ground will impact the 
migration habits of many of these birds, but we should not take a 
"temperate-centric" view on this. Birds don't just migrate to Colorado because 
it's a good place to breed; there are factors prompting them to leave their 
wintering ground as well.

 

Amber Carver

Littleton (Arapahoe Co.)

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