A walk into in a sliding glass door may
elicited a “ye-ow” and perhaps something even a little more,
shall we say, colorful?
Yet for North America's birds who are
now packing their bags for their breeding ground exit to fly to their
wintering homes, those same sliding glass doors are real killers.
So much so, in fact, that by the time
all of those thrushes, sparrows, larks, robins, hummingbirds, cedar
waxwings, woodcocks and other songbirds arrive in time for their
Southern version of a mint julep, an estimated 300 million to one
billion of them will not arrive.
Those figures tell the story of just
how dangerous glass is to birds, something that many humans have a
difficult time comprehending.
After all, while a person might explode
into a blue tirade when he or she conks his or her head into
well-cleaned glass nothing more than a temporary bruise or bump
results.
“Without question, collisions of
birds into glass is one of the most significant causes of bird
mortality worldwide,” said Christine Sheppard, manager of the
American Bird Conservancy's Birds Collisions Campaign.
Among the most vulnerable – or
perhaps, most glass-accident prone – North American birds species
are the wood thrush, the black-and-white warbler, the dark-eyed
junco, the white-throated sparrow, the ruby-throated hummingbird, and
the American woodcock, Sheppard says.
A major factor in birds dying by
striking glass, Sheppard says, is the fact that many bird species
migrate at night and through unfamiliar turf.
“Parts of the problem are actually
simple to understand,” Sheppard says.
This simplicity, says Sheppard, is
really an elementary deduction on the part of humans.
We, as humans (for the most part and
usually, anyway), can deduce when a pane of glass lies ahead.
The
give-away might be a window's frame or perhaps even a little bit of
dirt or smudge on the glass, arresting our attention and thus
avoiding a run-in, Sheppard says.
“Birds don't learn these cues so they
take any reflection literally or else they try to fly through what
they believe is transparent in order to reach something beyond,”
she said.
Sheppard says she and others are
working on ways to minimize the number of birds attempting to take a
detour through a double-pane of Anderson glass.
Her efforts include bird-avoidance
testing of various materials in an effort to find something that
works for people as well as for the birds.
Nor are manufacturers of glass turning
a blind eye to the issue, also says Sheppard, bringing into the
equation experts who hardly could be said are bird-brains.
These experts are even poking into the
realm of ultra-violet light, aware that while the human eye cannot
see into this range, a bird's eye can. Or at least in some fashion.
“One commercially available product
with a UV signature is virtually transparent, but only moderately
effective,” Sheppard says. “However, this manufacturer – along
with others – is working hard to perfect the technology.”
- Jeffrey L. Frischkorn
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