Songbirds are in
trouble throughout the eastern U.S. and new
research suggests that raccoons are a major
part of the problem. Raccoons love eggs, and
the study shows that populations of birds
with accessible nests have been dropping
since raccoon populations began rising in
the early 1980s in Illinois.
"Declines in vulnerable, low-nesting
songbird species in lllinois have paralleled
increases in raccoon populations, " says
Kenneth Schmidt of Texas Tech University in
Lubbock in the August issue of Conservation
Biology. Previous studies have shown that
lllinois may be losing more songbirds than
it produces. Low-nesting birds are doing
particularly poorly, and artificial nest
experiments suggest that raccoons are among
the main predators of eggs and chicks of the
state's ground-nesting birds.
Raccoons have increased greatly
in lllinois in the last 20 years, with
surveys spotting three times as many of the
nocturnal carnivores in recent years as in
the early 1980s.
To see if the state-wide decline in
low-nesting songbirds is linked to the
state-wide increase in raccoons, Schmidt
used existing data to track the population
trends of 40 bird species along 41 roadside
routes in lllinois from 1966 to 2001. There
were 18 low-nesting species (with nests less
than 8 feet above the ground) and 22
high-nesting species (with nests more than 8
feet above the ground). The data Schmidt
used came from the Breeding Bird Survey,
which samples birds along more than 3,000
25-mile roadside routes in the U.S. and
Canada.
Schmidt found that the decline in
low-nesting birds did coincide with the
early 1980s rise in raccoons. Before 1980,
the population trends were about the same
for low- and high-nesting birds. But after
1980, more low-nesting species declined:
more than 700/0 of the low-nesting species
declined while only half of the high-nesting
species declined along the routes studied
between 1980 and 2001. The other half of the
high-nesting species increased.
Moreover, Schmidt found that
after the raccoon population began rising,
the diversity of low-nesting birds decreased
while the diversity of high-nesting birds
increased: the number of low-nesting species
dropped about 100/0 while the number of
high-nesting species rose about 15% between
1980 and 2001 (from about 10 to 9 species,
and from about 9 to 10. 5 species per route,
respectively).
These findings may apply
throughout the eastern U.S. The raccoon
increase is driven by the eradication of top
carnivores, and by habitat fragmentation and
conversion to agriculture.
In Illinois, more than 70% of
forests are gone, and row-crops cover about
half of the land. "Habitat conversion and
the loss of top carnivores have aIlowed...raccoons
to flourish, in turn creating a hostile
landscape for songbirds," says Schmidt. This
situation is exacerbated by the fact that
the Illinois raccoon harvest decreased from
nearly 400,000 in 1979 to about 70,000 in
1990.
What's bad for the raccoons is
likely to be good for the birds, and Schmidt
predicts that low-nesting songbirds in the
eastern U.S. could rebound as raccoon rabies
spreads from its origin along the
Virginia/West Virginia border.
Contributed by Sandy C. Spencer
Wildlife Biologist Copyright
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