Published December 8, 2018 | Version v1

Data from: Artificial light at night confounds broad-scale habitat use by migrating birds

  • 1. University of Delaware
  • 2. University of Amsterdam
  • 3. United States Geological Survey
  • 4. Old Dominion University

Description

With many of the world's migratory bird populations in alarming decline, broad-scale assessments of responses to migratory hazards may prove crucial to successful conservation efforts. Most birds migrate at night through increasingly light-polluted skies. Bright light sources can attract airborne migrants and lead to collisions with structures, but might also influence selection of migratory stopover habitat and thereby acquisition of food resources. We demonstrate, using multi-year weather radar measurements of nocturnal migrants across the northeastern U.S., that autumnal migrant stopover density increased at regional scales with proximity to the brightest areas, but decreased within a few kilometers of brightly-lit sources. This finding implies broad-scale attraction to artificial light while airborne, impeding selection for extensive forest habitat. Given that high-quality stopover habitat is critical to successful migration, and hindrances during migration can decrease fitness, artificial lights present a potentially heightened conservation concern for migratory bird populations.

Notes

Files

EL_data.csv

Files (61.5 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c71dd9f9217ac5d6d1c444ab26fa9aca
61.4 MB Preview Download
md5:dad83a8c5f846d258a78d97b02da3641
83.5 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/ele.12902 (DOI)