Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Climate change creates 'win-win' between bald eagles and farmers
Bald eagle. Image courtesy: Brian E. Kushner/Lab of Ornithology.



ITHACA, NY.- As they seek new foods because climate change has altered their traditional diet of salmon carcasses, bald eagles in northwestern Washington state have become a boon to dairy farmers, deterring pests and removing animal carcasses from their farms, a new study finds.

The mutually beneficial relationship is described in “A Win-Win Between Farmers and an Apex Predator: Investigating the Relationship Between Bald Eagles and Dairy Farms,” which published March 10 in the journal Ecosphere.

“The narrative around birds of prey and farmers has traditionally been negative and combative, mainly due to claims of livestock predation,” said lead author Ethan Duvall, a doctoral student in the ecology and evolutionary biology. “However, dairy farmers in northwestern Washington do not consider the eagles threats. In fact, many farmers appreciate the services that the eagles provide such as carcass removal and pest-deterrence.”

Duvall, with collaborators Emily Schwabe and Karen Steensma from the University of Washington and Trinity Western University in Canada, conducted face-to face interviews with farmers on small, medium and large dairy operations in Whatcom County to better understand this unique relationship. The study was motivated by Duvall’s most recent research showing that eagles were redistributing from rivers to farmland in response to the declining availability of salmon carcasses during the past 50 years.

“Climate change has altered the chum salmon spawning schedule, causing them to run earlier in the winter,” said Duvall, who is affiliated with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "Now the salmon are spawning when annual Nooksack River flooding is at its peak. The fish who spawn and die are swept away by the high water instead of being deposited on shore where the eagles can easily access them.”

Duvall said the shift in timing has reduced the number of available carcasses on the local river, not the number of individual salmon. However, many rivers in the Pacific Northwest have experienced dramatic salmon population declines, also eliminating winter resources for eagles.

To make up for the reduction in their natural food supply, eagles have turned to the steady stream of dairy farm by-products resulting from the births and deaths of cows and prey on waterfowl populations which feed and rest in the agricultural areas. Bald Eagles also keep a lid on traditional farm pests, such as rodents and starlings.

"We know this positive interaction between farmers and Bald Eagles is not the norm in many other agricultural areas, especially near free-range poultry farms where the eagles snatch chickens," said Duvall. "But this study gives me hope that, moving forward, farmers, wildlife managers and conservationists can come together to think critically about how to maximize benefits for people and wildlife in the spaces they share."







Today's News

March 19, 2023

Antibody fragment-nanoparticle therapeutic eradicates cancer

Satellite powered by 48 AA batteries and a $20 microprocessor shows a low-cost way to reduce space junk

Immune-cell booster for cancer patients

DNA treatment could delay paralysis that strikes nearly all patients with ALS

Scientists discover giant insect genome

Team successfully generates mouse models for two subtypes of multiple myeloma

Coupling light and matter to ensure optimum brightness for displays

"Denoising" a noisy ocean

Losing a key type of pancreatic cell may contribute to diabetes

How fishermen benefit from the reversing evolution of cod

Climate change creates 'win-win' between bald eagles and farmers

Genetic causes of three previously unexplained rare diseases identified

Humans bite back by deactivating mosquito sperm

Scientists develop energy-saving, tunable meta-devices for high-precision, secure 6G communications

Electroactive bacterium generates well-defined nanosized metal catalysts with remarkable water-splitting performance

Researchers discover a new approach to harvesting aerial humidity with organic crystals

3D-printed revolving devices can sense how they are moving

'Terminator zones' on distant planets could harbor life, astronomers say



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful