News: Migration

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Mar 10, 2020

Spring migration is well underway for a number of species, and the tables below highlight species you can expect in your regions over the coming week!  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Feb 25, 2020

BirdCast returns with some species on the move discussions for spring 2020! Killdeer is a familiar and hardy shorebird with a generally high tolerance for human habitation and landscapes, and the earliest migrants of this species have been on the move in recent weeks.  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Feb 21, 2020

A tweet from the National Weather Service in Key West showing bird migration over the Florida Keys went viral, spread and has now been covered extensively by social and news media outlets. Team BirdCast adds some comments and color!  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Dec 16, 2019

Team BirdCast has been analyzing radar data with our group of talented collaborators, and today we published a new study on shifting patterns of nocturnal bird migration and how dynamic these patterns can be spatially.  Read more...

Migration
By Adriaan Dokter The Cornell Lab Sep 19, 2019

A study published today in the journal Science reveals that the volume of spring migration, as measured by the NEXRAD radar network in the night skies, has dropped by 14 percent in the past decade. The paper further compiles bird survey data collected on the ground, indicating that bird populations in the United States and Canada have declined by 29 percent since 1970, representing a loss of almost 3 billion birds.   Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Sep 11, 2019

Members of the BirdCast team will be at the Tribute in Light with New York City Audubon volunteers to monitor bird appearing in the intense beams of light this evening and collect additional data to study the effects of these intense lights on bird migration.  Read more...

Cyclones
By Benjamin Van Doren The Cornell Lab Sep 05, 2019

Hurricanes and their impacts, in particular in depositing seabirds far afield from their normal haunts, represent unique opportunities to understand how animals behave in and respond to serious disturbances. Check out live sightings of species that may by associated with the passage of Dorian this week.  Read more...

Cyclones
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Sep 05, 2019

BirdCast tracks with great interest the movements of hurricanes and the pelagic species that they often entrain and displace on shore and at times far inland. The team is also interested in bird migration around hurricanes, and with the arrival and passage of Hurricane Dorian off the coast of Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas, we can see how some birds handle the circulation of an intense cyclonic storm.   Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Aug 28, 2019

Welcome to fall migration season 2019 for BirdCast! Our 3-day forecast maps have returned, and our migration maps are live, so you can check predictions for and monitor nightly migration intensity through the fall season. Please visit us often!  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Aug 28, 2019

Welcome MistNet, a deep convolutional neural network to discriminate precipitation from biology in radar scans! MistNet is a tool that can enable large‐scale, long‐term, and reproducible measurements of whole migration systems, a hallmark of developments by our collaborators at University of Massachusetts and the BirdCast team. Read on to find out more about today's paper published describing this exciting new tool.  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Aug 02, 2019

19-22 April 2019 saw some spectacularly intense weather in the eastern US, with some obvious after effects in terms of migrating birds' distributions. Read on for a brief description of events that presumably carried nocturnally migrating songbirds farther afield that they intended to travel.  Read more...

Migration
By Cecilia Nilsson The Cornell Lab Aug 02, 2019

The BirdCast team has been busy publishing science! We have been very fortunate to publish a number of papers over the past year to document all the cool findings we've discovered in our work and with our collaborators. Here is a short summary of some of them, with links to where you can read more.  Read more...

Migration
By Cecilia Nilsson The Cornell Lab May 15, 2019

Special issue on Radar Aeroecology  As you know, one of the main methods we use to study birds here at BirdCast is radar. Radar has been used to study animal movements for a long time, but recent advances has greatly increased its use and lead to a new wave of research and applications of radar […]  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab May 03, 2019

Global Big Day is nearly here, and Team BirdCast wishes all of you birding around the planet an exciting, safe, and diverse day! For those teams birding in the US, we have a special addition of Species on the Move ... Good luck to all!  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab May 03, 2019

Global Big Day is almost here, and here's another Species on the Move that teams in Eastern Asia may hope to find!  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Apr 29, 2019

Migration is well under way across the globe, and Team BirdCast is highlighting a few species in interactive maps made with eBird data. Check out how the progression of migration for the group of species has changed over the last 30 days.  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Apr 11, 2019

Since its beginnings, BirdCast has been fortunate to receive media attention from a diverse array of outlets. We’ve assembled some of these below in this post to keep you all updated on the outreach and education. Some of the links are more directly related to our work with radar and aeroecology, others more closely to […]  Read more...

Migration
By Cecilia Nilsson The Cornell Lab Apr 02, 2019

ANN ARBOR—Birds that produce faint chirps called flight calls during nighttime migration collide with illuminated buildings much more often than closely related species that don’t produce such calls, according to a new analysis of a 40-year record of thousands of building collisions in the Midwest. The new analysis of more than 70,000 nighttime songbird collisions in […]  Read more...

Migration
By Cecilia Nilsson The Cornell Lab Apr 01, 2019

Chicago, Houston, and Dallas top the list Ithaca, NY—An estimated 600 million birds die from building collisions every year in the United States. Scientists at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology have published new research highlighting artificial light at night as a contributing factor. They’ve ranked metropolitan areas where, due to a combination of light pollution and […]  Read more...

Migration
By Andrew Farnsworth The Cornell Lab Apr 01, 2019

New research from the BirdCast team highlights risks of exposure to artificial light at night for migrating birds. We ranked metropolitan areas where birds are at the greatest risk of becoming attracted to and disoriented by lights.  Read more...

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