Kirtland's Warbler
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Kirtland's Warbler | ||||||||||||||
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Conservation status | ||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Dendroica kirtlandii (Baird, 1852) |
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Synonyms | ||||||||||||||
Dendroica kirtlandi (lapsus) |
Kirtland's Warbler, Dendroica kirtlandii, is a small songbird of the New World warbler family (Parulidae), named after Jared P. Kirtland, an Ohio doctor and amateur naturalist. Nearly extinct just 50 years ago, it is well on its way to recovery. It requires habitat destruction to survive and has been intensely studied by scientists for this peculiar trait.
Since the mid-19th century at last it has become a restricted-range endemic species. Almost the entire population spends the summer between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron and winters on the Bahamas.
These birds have bluish-grey upper parts with dark streaks on the back and yellow underparts with streaked flanks. They have thin wing bars, dark legs and a broken white eye ring. Females and juveniles are browner on the back. Like the Palm Warbler and Prairie Warbler, they wag their tails frequently. Their song is a loud chip-chip-chip-too-too-weet-weet often given from the top of a pine.
[edit] Range and ecology
Their breeding range is in a very limited area in the north of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan.The habitat is typically Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) forest in a state of turnover. Populations are most vigorous in areas where there is significant clearing and/or disastrous forest fires. For winter, leaving about the start of September, they migrate to pine forests in the Bahamas and nearby Turks and Caicos Islands; they arrive to breed again around late May[1]. In the winter quarters, they occur in shrubland and Bahamas Pine (P. caribaea var. bahamensis) stands on near the sea and in the uplands[2].
Kirtland's Warblers forage in the lower parts of trees, sometimes hovering or searching on the ground. These birds eat insects and some berries, also eating fruit in winter. For breeding they require stands of young (4 to 20 year old, 2-4 meters high) Jack Pine trees. However, their open cup nest is not built in these but a short distance away on sandy soil.
[edit] Status and conservation
Ecology of Jack Pine
Jack Pines are somewhat smallish pine widespread from the Canadian tundra and taiga to the Great Lakes region and the Atlantic Ocean; they are a boreal species, only occurring in a certain climate[3]. Their cones open only after trees have been cleared away by forest fires or, after logging, in the summer sun. About all of its present-day range was covered by solid ice as late as 10.000 to 15.000 years ago; the range of the pine (and as it seems the warbler also) was probably a contiguous swath between the Appalachian Mountains and the Great Plains. The pine's peculiar reproductive strategy fits well with a dry taiga or cool temperate habitat as would have predominated there, probably with a higher incidence of forest fires than today, as the ice age climate was somewhat drier overall[4].
Decline to near-extinction
As global climate changed out of the ice age through the last 10 millennia or so, Jack Pine, and consequently also Kirtland's Warbler, shifted their habitat north. As warbler - as usual for Parulidae - is not able to expand into subarctic climate all too well, most Jack Pine woods are too far north for it. Moreover, the Great Lakes which formed before the receding ice were an obstacle for its spread. Kirtland's Warbler found itself blocked by the expanse of water, while the cold-hardy Jack Pine expanded its range as far as the Northwest Territories.
With European settlement of North America progressing in earnest, much of the forest in the southern Great Lakes region was cut away, never to be restocked. Kirtland's Warbler became trapped on the Northern Peninsula. It may or may not have occurred in Dr. Kirtland's home state Ohio in recent times, but if it did is actually would seem to have gone extinct not too far away from 1877 when its namesake himself died. What habitat there might have been was cleared away in the latter half of the 19th century, and certainly the bird was definitely not breeding there anymore in 1906[5]. Kirtland's Warblers used to breed in Ontario but have not done so since the 1940s. By the mid-20th century its numbers had crashed to near-extinction. The Kirtland's Warbler population reached lows of probably less than 500 individuals around the 1970s, and in 1994 only 18 km² of suitable breeding habitat was available[2].
Recovery
Today his bird's habitat is being preserved by controlled burns and staggered timber harvests in its limited breeding range. Since this habitat management regime was begun in the 1970s, the birds numbers have steadily risen, though they are still at dangerously low levels. People have also intervened to protect this bird against nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds, to which these birds are highly susceptible.
They have still been observed to occur in Ontario and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and though it is still only rarely recorded in NW Ohio (where there is hardly any significant woodland of any sort left), the numbers of recorded birds are increasing[6]. Beginning in 2005, a small number have been observed in Wisconsin. In 2007, three Kirtland's Warbler nests were discovered in central Wisconsin[7] and one at CFB Petawawa[8], providing an auspicious sign that they are recovering and expanding their range once again.
Although there seem to be no more 5,000 Kirtland's Warblers young and old in total as of late 2007[7], 4 years earlier they numbered just 2,500-3,000. Classified as Vulnerable to extinction since 1994, Kirtland's Warbler was downlisted to Near Threatened in 2005 due to its encouraging recovery. It is not clear to which extent the birds depend on Bahamas Pine during winter; deforestation on the wintering grounds may eventually become a bigger threat to the birds' recovery than the situation in its breeding range.[2]
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources has recently made optimistic reports about the populations of Kirtland's Warblers.[9]
There is a Kirtland's Warbler Festival, which is sponsored in part by Kirtland Community College.[10]
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- BirdLife International (BLI) (2005). Dendroica kirtlandii. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 11 May 2006. Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is near threatened
- CFB Petawawa (CFBP) (2007): Canada's Rarest Nesting Bird found at CFB Petawawa. Version of 2007-Nov-01. Retrieved 2008-FEB-19.
- Henninger, W.F. (1906): A preliminary list of the birds of Seneca County, Ohio. Wilson Bull. 18(2): 47-60. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
- Mayfield, Harold (1960): The Kirtland's Warbler. Cranbrook Institute of Science Bulletin 40.
- Ohio Ornithological Society (OOS) (2004): Annotated Ohio state checklist. Version of April 2004. PDF fulltext
- Peel, M.C.; Finlayson, B.L. & McMahon, T.A. (2007): Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 11(5): 1633-1644. PDF fulltext Supplement
- Ray, Nicolas & Adams, Jonathan M. (2001): A GIS-based Vegetation Map of the World at the Last Glacial Maximum (25,000-15,000 BP). Internet Archaeology [11]. PDF fulltext
- United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) (2007): Kirtland's Warbler 2007 Nesting Season Summary. Version of 2007-DEC-10. Retrieved 2008-FEB-19.
[edit] External links
- Cornell University Ornithology Laboratory, Kirtland's Warbler, including link that plays its song.
- Kirtland Warbler Festival and links.
- Kirtland's Warbler, Michigan Department of Natural Resources
- The Nature Conservancy Songbirds: Kirtland's Warbler
- Kirtland's Warbler, US Fish and Wildlife Service
- Endangered species report: how Kirtland's Warbler breeding population has risen to some 1,500 pairs
- Stamps