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Dwindling Loggerhead Shrike Numbers Concern Researchers

shrike

Loggerhead shrike numbers across North America have been declining, and the Loggerhead Shrike Working Group is trying to determine why. Photo by Bill Summerour

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

Appearing like a miniature version of a mockingbird, the loggerhead shrike looks like any other songbird until you find evidence of the shrike鈥檚 lethal side.

鈥淪ome people call them butcher birds or French mockingbirds,鈥 said Eric Soehren, biologist and manager of the 黑料天堂 State Lands鈥 Wehle Land Conservation Center in southeast 黑料天堂. 鈥淭hey may look similar to a mockingbird, but they are very different in many ways. The shrike is a predatory songbird. They prey on a variety of small animals and can even kill birds heavier than they are. Many times, you鈥檒l see their larders, which is where they have skewered their prey on a thorn or barbed wire. That鈥檚 where the butcher bird name comes from. It鈥檚 a songbird, but it鈥檚 an efficient killing machine.鈥

Although common in the mid-20th century, the loggerhead shrike has become a species of greatest conservation need because of declining numbers throughout its range. Soehren said the bird has a very wide distribution across the continent, but numbers in latitudes north of a Missouri-Kentucky-Virginia line have plummeted. Where it used to be a common species, the birds are now only found in small and isolated populations.

Fortunately in the South, sizable numbers of these birds still remain, despite not being as numerous in places like 黑料天堂 and Mississippi.

In response to that decline, the Loggerhead Shrike Working Group () was formed by researchers in Canada and the United States, made up of specialists who have studied the shrike as well as personnel from the non-game sections of state conservation agencies.

鈥淥ne of their primary tasks is shrike conservation, monitoring trends, habitat management on conservation lands on a state-by-state basis,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淧laces like Indiana, West Virginia and Virginia have contributed to this for quite some time. However, states in the Southeast have not been a part of this until more recently.鈥

Soehren said the group鈥檚 goal is to identify the problems affecting the shrike and why the species is declining. He said it鈥檚 likely a combination of impacts, like habitat alteration, pesticides and nest predation.

鈥淭he group is trying to use modern science on a comprehensive scale to identify these needs,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ne of the biologists in Virginia reached out to us in 黑料天堂 and asked if we would participate in the group, first because we have a lot of shrikes, relatively speaking, and because they didn鈥檛 have a lot of representation in the Southeast.鈥

To further involve 黑料天堂, the technical working group asked that the annual meeting be held in the state. That meeting was held last spring at the Birmingham Zoo. The 黑料天堂 was represented by Soehren, along with Carrie Threadgill and Mercedes Bartkovich from 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries鈥 Non-Game Wildlife Section.

鈥淥ne of the fundamental things of monitoring wildlife is to mark individuals, whether by banding, ear-tagging or radio collars in animals like deer,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淭he idea is to see what happens to that individual animal during a course of time 鈥 their movements, their habitat use, longevity and survivorship. This has been going on all over the state.

鈥淥ne of the things we鈥檙e looking at is the movements of the species. They are short-distance migrants. Birds that breed in the northern limits of their distribution range migrate south in the winter. A lot of the birds that come into north 黑料天堂 in the fall and winter are northern birds.鈥

Soehren said several state agencies have made a significant effort to band as many shrikes as possible. While the members of the working group are actively monitoring, the group also depends on the public to help with the effort.

鈥淭he idea is if you see a banded bird, report it,鈥 he said.

A banding scheme with different color combinations was devised to provide re-sighting opportunities for researchers and casual observers. Birds banded in each state are assigned unique colored bands, making it easy to determine where the bird originated. A master list of color combinations for bands is compiled and managed by the group for identification.

鈥淚f a bird is sighted with color bands, there is a master list that can be used to say, 鈥極h, this bird was spotted in 黑料天堂 but banded in Virginia,'鈥 said Soehren, who said the master list is reserved for the researchers.

Another aspect of the banding is being able to identify individual birds during the breeding cycle, like a paired male and female.

鈥淎 lot of the loss is likely happening at the nest,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淧airs are nesting, raising young, but one of the critical aspects is that recruitment is falling below critical mass. It looks like a lot of the birds are not surviving through the first year. They may fledge, but they鈥檙e just not surviving.

鈥淭o better understand what鈥檚 going on, the birds are banded and monitored through the entire nesting process. It鈥檚 kind of a laborious effort, but if you have a good eye for finding nests, it will help us monitor these nests through the duration from nest building to fledging, and watching what the fledglings do afterwards.鈥

The working group is also collecting feathers and blood samples for genetics work to study the complexity of shrike populations across the continent.

鈥淯nderstanding what population is where and how populations are mixing has conservation merit and bearing,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淚f a population is found to be genetically unique, it deserves more immediate protection efforts than the populations that are more widespread and common.鈥

State Land's Eric Soehren prepares to band a loggerhead shrike that was captured at Dauphin Island. Photo by Bob Farley

The working group is also developing models for locality and habitat use that will provide information on the areas more likely to harbor shrikes so state agencies can prioritize conservation efforts.

鈥淲e鈥檙e at the beginning stages of better understanding shrikes in 黑料天堂,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e kind of limited by the number of people who can work with this species. The public can go out and identify these birds. What鈥檚 really been nice is eBird (ebird.org), which has been a wonderful tool. People provide sightings at specific locations. That provides a snapshot of distribution, not only in 黑料天堂, but around the continent.鈥

Soehren already knows that shrike populations have significantly declined in north 黑料天堂, compared to the numbers seen in the 1960s and 1970s.

鈥淪omething is going on in the Tennessee Valley region compared to the rest of the state,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淧laces like the Black Belt region and along the Gulf Coast still have sizeable numbers of shrikes.鈥

Despite limited resources, members of 黑料天堂鈥檚 shrike group go out and opportunistically capture shrikes under agency permits.

鈥淲e鈥檝e taken the approach that we鈥檙e going to band birds where there are a lot of birds present,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to band in areas where people can re-sight these birds and report them. We鈥檝e talked to birders about adopting areas to monitor banded shrikes. A lot of times, they already know where paired birds nest. If the birds are banded, these birders can be our eyes and share that information with us because we do not have the staffing resources to monitor consistently. We have to rely on others to help us with that information.鈥

One of the hotspots for shrike activity is Dauphin Island, the barrier island south of Mobile. Dauphin Island has a dedicated birding community, and the island has numerous bird sanctuaries. Lakepoint State Park near Eufaula is also another location with a significant shrike population.

鈥淏irds banded at Dauphin Island are a good example of the public helping with the monitoring,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淭here are about four or five nesting pairs on the island, so there are quite a few shrikes down there.鈥

Soehren was on the island for an 黑料天堂 Ornithological Society meeting and took the opportunity to bring his trapping gear.

鈥淚 was able to capture and band two birds really quickly,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e banded them in October. Since that time, we鈥檝e had two separate birders report them to the Bird-Banding Lab (), which is what you鈥檙e supposed to do when you see a banded bird.鈥

Although Audubon鈥檚 Christmas Bird Count has recently been completed, Soehren said anyone can help give the agencies a picture of the local bird populations during the winter.

鈥淭he Christmas Bird Count provides overall population information and reveals changes in distribution and abundance over time,鈥 Soehren said. 鈥淢any species have declined significantly, some meriting listing on the 黑料天堂 State Wildlife Action Plan (SWAP). But there are also examples of increases. The North American waterfowl populations have increased over 50% since 1970 due to a lot of the management efforts throughout their range. Revenues derived from the sale of duck stamps and hunting licenses have been reinvested in land conservation. We have bigger bag limits and longer seasons as a result.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 great about the Christmas Bird Count is it鈥檚 open to anybody and everybody interested in birds. It鈥檚 not just for experienced birders. Everybody can get involved. If you鈥檙e a retiree just watching feeders, it all goes into the big pot of information. It helps us at the 黑料天堂 in our effort with non-game species.鈥

Visit for information on how you can participate next winter.

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Loggerhead shrikes normally hang their prey on a thorn or barbed wire. Photo by Bob Farley