Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 38 | Page 15

• • Birds making long flights over water • • Shorebirds are solitary nesters, and • • Like airline pilots, migrating birds • • Bird banding, today done worldwide, generally fly at much higher altitudes than those who opt for routes over land. choose their airspeed based on wind speed, wind direction, and weather. • • Red knots are called Moonbirds in honor of one intrepid flyer that scientists were able to track over the course of 20 years, flying the equivalent of a trip to the moon and halfway back. Phillip Hoose tells the story in Moonbird: A Year on the Wind with the Great Survivor B95, a fascinating children’s book. • • To survive, shorebirds must have healthy habitat in each of three very different locations where they spend part of every year: 1) Northern breeding grounds; 2) Southern non-breeding grounds (sometimes called wintering areas); 3) Stopover locations strategically located along migration routes (Kiawah is an important stopover location) • • Because they depend heavily on the same coastal regions that attract human development, shorebirds have experienced greater declines in population than other bird groups. • • If undernourished due to inadequate food at a stopover, migrators are likely to die before reaching their destination. If they are lucky enough to limp into their northern breeding grounds, they are too weak to produce strong offspring, and the next generation suffers. • • The biggest threats to shorebird populations are man-made. • • In preparation for migration, shorebirds bulk up, adding up to 100 percent of their body weight. Imagine how much you would have to eat to double your weight! SUMMER/FALL 2017 • VOLUME 38 the nests tend to be shallow scrapes on the ground, often in sand, making them vulnerable to predation. remains the best way to gather large quantities of data. Radio telemetry and radar are adding data confirming migration routes and important stopover spots. The sum of all this is helping scientists to gradually unravel the mysteries of bird migration. • • The smallest of all shorebirds is the least sandpiper, weighing about one ounce and only slightly larger than a sparrow. After breeding in the Canadian tundra, this mighty midget migrates up to 2,000 miles, much of it non-stop over water, to winter in the southern U.S. and northern South America. (See photo, middle-right.) • • Groups of shorebirds that rise and fly as one are engaging in a survival technique much as fish who move as a school to appear more formidable to predators. • • Shorebirds are considered important indicator species for us, essentially “canaries in the coalmine.” What adversely affects them will eventually be bad for us. NK * Comparison courtesy of field biologist blogger Ann McElhatton http://beachchairscientist.com Similar comparisons made by Smithsonian National Zoo and Conservation Institute. To learn more about shorebirds and migration: • • South Carolina Department of Natural Resources • • United States Fish and Wildlife Service • • Smithsonian National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute • • Cornell Lab of Ornithology 13