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Scientists To Trace Bird Migration With Tech

The project aims at unravelඣing why some American robins migrate long distances, but others do not

Scientists To Trace Bird Migration With Tech
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A plump robin wearing 🐓a tiny metal backpack with an antenna hops around a suburban yard in Takoma 𓂃Park, then plucks a cicada from the ground for a snack.

Ecologist 𒀰Emily Williams watches through binoculars from behind a bush. On this clear spring day, she'✃s snooping on his dating life. “Now I'm watching to see whether he's found a mate,” she said, scrutinizing his interactions with another robin in a nearby tree.

Once th🌟e bird moves on at season's end, she'll rely on the backpack to beam freq♔uent location data to the Argos satellite, then back to Williams' laptop, to track it.

The goal is to unravel why some American robins migrate long distances, but others do not. With more precise information about🌼 nesting success and conditions in breeding and wintering grounds, “we should be able to tell the relative roles of genetics versus ♛the environment in shaping why birds migrate,” said Williams, who is based at Georgetown University.

Putting beacons on birds is not novel. But a new antenna on the International Space Station and receptors on the Argos satellite, p꧙lus the shrinking size of tracking chips and batteries, are allowing scientists to remotely monitor songbird movements in much greater detail than ever before.

“We're in a sort of golden age for bird research,” said Adriaan Dokter, an ecologist at Corne🎐ll University who is not directly involved with Willi🐲ams' study.

“It's pretty amazing that we can satellite-track a robin with smaller and small𒁏er chips. Ten ye🌸ars ago, that was unthinkable.”

The device this robin is wearing can give precise locations, within about 30 feet (about 10 meters), instead of﷽ around 125 miles (200 kilometers) for previous generations of tags.

That means Williams can te🎃ll not only whether the bird is still in the city, but on which street or backyard. Or whether it's flown from the Washington, DC, suburbs to land on the White House lawn.

A second new tag, for only the hea♕viest robins, iඣncludes an accelerometer to provide information about the bird's movements; future versions may also measure humidity and barometric pressure. These Icarus tags work with a new antenna on the International Space Station.

That antenna was first turned on about two years ago, “but there were some glitches with the p⛦ower-supply and the computer, so we had to bring it down again with a Russian rocket, then transport it from Moscow to Germany to fix it,” said Martin Wikelski, director of the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, whose scientific team is honing the technology. After “the usual troubleshooting for space science," the antenna was turned back on this spring.

As researchers deploy precision tags, Wikelski envisions the developme🐼nt of “an Internet of animals' — a collection of sensors around the world giving us a better🃏 picture of the movement of life on the planet.”

The American robin is an iconic songbird in North America, its bright chirp a harbinger of spring. Yet its migratory ꦓhabits remain a bit mysterio🌞us to scientists.

“It's astounding how little we know about some of the most common songbirds,” said Ken Rosenberg, a conservatioꦆn scientist at Cornell University. “ꦿWe have a general idea of migration, a range map, but that's really just a broad impression.”

An earlier study Williams worked on showed some robins are lon🃏g-distance migrants — flying more than 2,780 miles (4,480 km) between their breeding area in Alaska and winter grounds in Texas — while others hop around a single backyard most of the year.

What factors drive some robins to migrate, while others don't? Does it have to do with available food, temperature fluctuations or success in mating and rearing ch�ꦑ�icks?

Williams hopes more detailed data from satellite tags, combined with records of nesting success, will provide insights, and she's working with partners who are tagging robins in Alaska, Indiana and Florida for a three-year study♊.

Scientists have previously put GPS-tracking devices on larger raptors, but the technology has only recently become small and ligh💦t enough for some songbirds.🧸 Tracking devices must be less than 5% of the animal's weight to avoid encumbering them.

In a Silver Spring, Maryland, yard, 🃏Williams has unfurled nylon nets between tall aluminum poles. When a robin flies into the net, she delicately untangles the bird. Then she holds it in a “bander's grip" — with her forefinger and middle finger loosely on either side of the bird's neck, and another two fingers around its body.

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