More Raccoons Mean Fewer Songbirds |
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.
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 |