By outfitting tiny birds with even tinier tracking “backpacks,” an international research team – led by a University of Guelph professor —  has confirmed what many scientists had long suspected: the blackpoll warblers annual migration route includes a three-day, nonstop flight over the Atlantic Ocean.

For more than 50 years, scientists have debated about whether the diminutive birds flew over the Atlantic – a journey of some 2,500-kilometres — without landing or stopped en route along the eastern coast of the United States.

There have been no definitive answers – until now.

“This is the first study to provide direct evidence of the birds’ migration route – we found they flew directly over the Atlantic Ocean to reach their wintering grounds in South Amercia,” said Ryan Norris, a professor in Guelph’s Department of Integrative Biology, who led the Canadian portion of the research.

The study was published today in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

It also involved researchers at Acadia University, Bird Studies Canada, the University of Massachusetts, the Vermont Centre for Ecostudies and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.

Blackpolls are songbirds weighing about 12 grams, or less than two Canadian loonies. They are  found in boreal forests of Canada and the United States from spring until early fall. Before migrating to South America for the winter, they spend summers in boreal forests stretching across North America.

“The indirect evidence in favour of an Atlantic voyage was fairly strong,” Norris said.

“You have birds landing on ships in the Atlantic, radar studies off the tip of Nova Scotia showing the birds heading south, and very few sightings of blackpolls in the southern U.S. in the fall.”

The researchers used geo-locators to track blackpolls on their annual flight south to the Caribbean and on their way north to Canada and the United States in the spring.

The tiny devices — each weighing only 0.5 g — sat on the backs of the birds and were attached using leg loop harnesses, much like a person would wear a backpack.

They were attached to birds in Nova Scotia and Vermont in the summer. The researchers also placed coloured plastic bands on the birds to identify them when they returned.

The tiny “backpack” is barely visible through the feathers of the blackpoll warbler. Photo credit: Vermont Centres for EcoStudies

The geo-locators tracked the birds’ flight path, but, because of their small size, they were not able to transmit the data remotely.

“We waited for them to return in the spring and then searched the forest to find the blackpolls with geo-locators,” said William DeLuca, a research fellow at U Massachusetts, who le
d the Vermont part of the study.

The team retrieved the devices from those birds to look at the data.

“When we accessed the locators, we saw the blackpolls’ journey was indeed directly over the Atlantic. The distances travelled ranged from 2,270 to 2,770 km,” said DeLuca.

Each bird took 2 ½ to three days to make the trip. To prepare for the flight, they build up their fat stores, said Norris.

Bird pack 1
Photo credit: Vermont Centres for EcoStudies

 

“These birds have a tremendous voyage ahead of them, with some likely flying from western Canada to the east coast before flying south. They eat as much as possible, in some cases doubling their body mass in fat so they can fly without needing food or water,” he said.

“For blackpolls, they don’t have the option of failing or coming up a bit short. It’s a fly-or-die journey that requires so much energy.”

Contact:
Ryan Norris
Department of Integrative Biology
rnorris@uoguelph.ca

519-824-4120, Ext. 56300 or 54582