| Literature DB >> 31693699 |
Scott R Loss1, Sirena Lao1, Joanna W Eckles2, Abigail W Anderson3, Robert B Blair3, Reed J Turner2.
Abstract
Bird-building collisions are the largest source of avian collision mortality in North America. Despite a growing literature on bird-building collisions, little research has been conducted in downtown areas of major cities, and no studies have included stadiums, which can be extremely large, often have extensive glass surfaces and lighting, and therefore may cause many bird collisions. Further, few studies have assessed the role of nighttime lighting in increasing collisions, despite the often-cited importance of this factor, or considered collision correlates for different seasons and bird species. We conducted bird collision monitoring over four migration seasons at 21 buildings, including a large multi-use stadium, in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. We used a rigorous survey methodology to quantify among-building variation in collisions and assess how building features (e.g., glass area, lighting, vegetation) influence total collision fatalities, fatalities for separate seasons and species, and numbers of species colliding. Four buildings, including the stadium, caused a high proportion of all collisions and drove positive effects of glass area and amount of surrounding vegetation on most collision variables. Excluding these buildings from analyses resulted in slightly different collision predictors, suggesting that factors leading some buildings to cause high numbers of collisions are not the exact same factors causing variation among more typical buildings. We also found variation in collision correlates between spring and fall migration and among bird species, that factors influencing collision fatalities also influence numbers of species colliding, and that the proportion, and potentially area, of glass lighted at night are associated with collisions. Thus, reducing bird collisions at large buildings, including stadiums, should be achievable by reducing glass area (or treating existing glass), reducing light emission at night, and prioritizing mitigation efforts for glass surfaces near vegetated areas and/or avoiding use of vegetation near glass.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31693699 PMCID: PMC6834121 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study area.
(a) General location of study area in the United States and (b) location of study area containing 21 buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium (large, gray, irregularly shaped building in lower right of image), monitored for bird collisions in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2017–2018; image sources: USGS National Map Viewer base map (a) and NAIP Plus aerial imagery (b).
Characteristics of monitored buildings.
| Prop. vegetation | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building ID | Quintile | Height (m) | Glass area (m2) | Area light (m2) | Prop. light | Footprint (m2) | Distance to river (m) | 50 m buffer | 100 m buffer |
| 1 (Stadium) | NA | 83 | 11,319 | 7,722 | 0.68 | 51,863 | 612 | 0.16 | 0.10 |
| 2 | 1 | 26 | 980 | 494 | 0.50 | 5,956 | 955 | 0.01 | 0.02 |
| 3 | 5 | 139 | 4,255 | 996 | 0.23 | 3,233 | 998 | 0.22 | 0.10 |
| 4 | 5 | 241 | 16,913 | 2,454 | 0.15 | 2,415 | 1,096 | 0.00 | 0.01 |
| 5 | 3 | 19 | 1,825 | 232 | 0.13 | 2,576 | 494 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
| 6 | 4 | 127 | 1,434 | 624 | 0.44 | 4,727 | 660 | 0.00 | 0.01 |
| 7 | 2 | 95 | 682 | 128 | 0.19 | 1,029 | 831 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| 8 | 2 | 46 | 782 | 375 | 0.48 | 1,583 | 999 | 0.00 | 0.01 |
| 9 | 5 | 64 | 3,476 | 1,112 | 0.32 | 3,835 | 857 | 0.03 | 0.03 |
| 10 | 4 | 73 | 452 | 234 | 0.52 | 1,522 | 761 | 0.01 | 0.01 |
| 11 | 4 | 34 | 2,165 | 367 | 0.17 | 1,504 | 553 | 0.06 | 0.03 |
| 12 | 3 | 30 | 1,947 | 895 | 0.46 | 2,725 | 538 | 0.02 | 0.03 |
| 13 | 1 | 61 | 1,651 | 1,317 | 0.80 | 5,762 | 1,368 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| 14 | 1 | 26 | 452 | 172 | 0.38 | 4,294 | 1,290 | 0.01 | 0.01 |
| 15 | 3 | 171 | 8,245 | 1,772 | 0.21 | 3,724 | 741 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| 16 | 2 | 12 | 296 | 23 | 0.08 | 1,505 | 1,407 | 0.04 | 0.03 |
| 17 | 5 | 123 | 6,537 | 4,277 | 0.65 | 4,615 | 811 | 0.19 | 0.12 |
| 18 | NA | 29 | 773 | 233 | 0.30 | 1,636 | 338 | 0.00 | 0.01 |
| 19 | NA | 92 | 3,698 | 261 | 0.07 | 5,461 | 451 | 0.03 | 0.12 |
| 20 | NA | 15 | 4,476 | 1,048 | 0.23 | 5,779 | 385 | 0.04 | 0.05 |
| 21 | NA | 19 | 933 | 377 | 0.40 | 2,799 | 398 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
Characteristics of 21 buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium, monitored for bird collisions in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2017–2018.
aUnique numeric code for each building used for purposes of current study.
bFor buildings previously monitored in Project BirdSafe, the quintile into which they were placed for stratified random selection approach in the current study (see text for details); quintiles are based on total collisions observed across 64 buildings originally monitored in that earlier study (1 = 0–20 percentile of observed collisions; 2 = 20–40%; 3 = 40–60%; 4 = 60–80%; 5 = 80–100%; NA indicates buildings with no past history of collision monitoring).
cEstimated height of the main roof of the building.
dTotal estimated area of glass (including windows and other glass surfaces) across all building facades, excluding glass recessed from the main façade for which collision casualties were likely to land on elevated surfaces not covered by surveys.
eArea of all windows emitting artificial light during nighttime periods.
fProportion of all glass surfaces emitting artificial light during nighttime periods (calculated by dividing Area light by Glass area).
gHorizontal ground area covered by the building (based on building’s outer edge).
hDistance from building centroid to nearest edge of the Mississippi River corridor
iProportion of land covered by vegetation within 50 and 100m of building (includes grass/shrub and deciduous/coniferous trees; excludes bare soil, roads and other paved surfaces, and other buildings)
Collision counts, results of removal and detection trials, and bias-adjusted fatality estimates for all buildings.
| Raw counts | Bias trials | Bias-adjusted fatalities | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building Id | Fatal | Non-fatal | # of species | Removal | Detection | Detection prob. | Low | High |
| 17 | 254–264 | 51–51 | 44 | 43 | 5 | 0.59 (0.48–0.69) | 431 (370–525) | 448 (384–545) |
| 4 | 91–113 | 27–30 | 38 | 32 | 6 | 0.31 (0.18–0.45) | 297 (202–493) | 369 (251–613) |
| 1 (Stadium) | 155–159 | 70–70 | 42 | 27 | 23 | 0.70 (0.56–0.80) | 222 (192–274) | 228 (197–281) |
| 3 | 77–112 | 18–20 | 35 | 33 | 1 | 0.48 (0.36–0.61) | 158 (126–211) | 231 (184–307) |
| 8 | 4–8 | 0–1 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 0.04 (0.00–0.62) | 114 (6–4000) | 228 (12–8000) |
| 9 | 59–64 | 8–10 | 24 | 24 | 14 | 0.70 (0.58–0.81) | 83 (72–102) | 90 (78–111) |
| 19 | 29–34 | 4–4 | 17 | 14 | 3 | 0.43 (0.25–0.62) | 67 (46–115) | 79 (54–135) |
| 12 | 25–26 | 5–7 | 13 | 10 | 4 | 0.53 (0.33–0.72) | 47 (34–76) | 48 (36–79) |
| 20 | 23–28 | 9–10 | 15 | 9 | 2 | 0.51 (0.28–0.72) | 45 (32–83) | 54 (39–101) |
| 15 | 11–15 | 5–5 | 9 | 11 | 1 | 0.29 (0.14–0.50) | 37 (21–76) | 51 (29–104) |
| 13 | 6–8 | 4–4 | 9 | 8 | 4 | 0.24 (0.08–0.50) | 24 (12–72) | 32 (16–96) |
| 2 | 9–18 | 1–3 | 9 | 6 | 3 | 0.39 (0.18–0.64) | 22 (13–50) | 45 (27–101) |
| 6 | 14–45 | 4–4 | 10 | 14 | 4 | 0.64 (0.48–0.79) | 21 (17–29) | 70 (57–94) |
| 16 | 1–1 | 1–1 | 1 | 6 | 1 | 0.05 (0.00–0.61) | 20 (1–1000) | 20 (1–1000) |
| 21 | 5–7 | 2–2 | 5 | 8 | 9 | 0.45 (0.24–0.69) | 11 (7–20) | 15 (10–29) |
| 5 | 5–11 | 5–6 | 6 | 8 | 6 | 0.65 (0.44–0.81) | 7 (6–11) | 16 (13–24) |
| 10 | 4–4 | 3–3 | 6 | 5 | 6 | 0.56 (0.24–0.80) | 7 (4–16) | 7 (4–16) |
| 11 | 3–6 | 2–2 | 5 | 7 | 2 | 0.51 (0.24–0.74) | 5 (4–12) | 11 (8–24) |
| 14 | 1–6 | 1–1 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 0.18 (0.02–0.65) | 5 (1–58) | 33 (9–350) |
| 7 | 2–2 | 0–0 | 2 | 5 | 3 | 0.57 (0.29–0.78) | 3 (2–7) | 3 (2–7) |
| 18 | 2–2 | 0–0 | 2 | 8 | 3 | 0.61 (0.37–0.79) | 3 (2–5) | 3 (2–5) |
| Totals | 780–933 | 220–234 | 75 | 286 | 105 | - | 1629 (1170–7235) | 2081 (1413–12022) |
Collision counts, results of removal and detection trials, and bias-adjusted bird fatality estimates for 21 buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium, monitored in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2017–2018. Table includes raw counts of fatal and non-fatal collisions; information about bias trials that were used to generate detection probability estimates accounting for both carcass removal and imperfect detection of window-killed bird carcasses; and bias-adjusted fatality estimates based on application of detection probability estimates to raw fatal collision counts. Buildings are ranked in descending order based on the low bias-adjusted fatality estimate (parentheses indicate 95% confidence intervals).
aUnique numeric code for each building used for purposes of current study.
bRaw counts for fatal and non-fatal collisions at each building; low and high values are counts that respectively exclude and include birds potentially resulting from predation events (for fatal collisions) and collisions with skyways between buildings (for fatal and non-fatal collisions).
cNumber of species observed as collision casualties across the entire study, including both fatal and non-fatal collisions.
dNumber of carcass removal trials conducted to quantify animal scavenger and human removal of carcasses, number of detection trials conducted to quantify surveyor detection probability for carcasses present in search area (excludes detection trials where trial carcasses were removed before surveyors had a chance to encounter them), and estimated probability of detecting a window-killed carcass that falls in the survey area (detection probability accounts for both removal and detection probability).
eBias-adjusted fatality estimates based on application of detection probability estimates to raw fatal collision counts; low and high adjusted estimates were generated using the low and high fatal collision counts.
Fig 2Bird collisions at U.S. Bank stadium.
(a) Locations of 229 bird collisions (159 fatal collisions; 70 non-fatal collisions; 95 collisions in 2017; 134 in 2018) observed during monitoring at U.S. Bank Stadium in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2017–2018; Points include carcasses potentially resulting from predation events and bird collisions with skyways (i.e., the high raw counts described in the text). (b, c) the largest unbroken span of glass (~6,000 m2) where 52% of all collisions at the stadium occurred; (d) a glass surface on the northeast façade where 11% of collisions occurred; (e) a glass surface on the southwest façade where 17% of collisions occurred. Image sources: USGS National Map Viewer NAIP Plus aerial imagery (a); the authors (b-e).
Top ten most frequently colliding bird species.
| All seasons | Spring (15 Mar-31 May) | ||
| Species | Count | Species | Count |
| White-throated Sparrow | 141 | Ovenbird | 37 |
| Nashville Warbler | 108 | White-throated Sparrow | 34 |
| Ovenbird | 98 | Tennessee Warbler | 15 |
| Common Yellowthroat | 74 | Unknown bird | 13 |
| Tennessee Warbler | 68 | American Woodcock | 8 |
| Dark-eyed Junco | 33 | Black-billed Cuckoo | 7 |
| Unknown birda | 32 | Northern Waterthrush | 7 |
| Black-and-white Warbler | 29 | Dark-eyed Junco | 7 |
| Ruby-throated Hummingbird | 26 | Black-and-white Warbler | 6 |
| Northern Waterthrush | 22 | Yellow-bellied Sapsucker | 5 |
| Summer (1–30 Jun) | Fall (15 Aug-31 Oct) | ||
| Species | Count | Species | Count |
| House Sparrow | 6 | White-throated Sparrow | 107 |
| Black-billed Cuckoo | 5 | Nashville Warbler | 104 |
| Yellow-billed Cuckoo | 4 | Common Yellowthroat | 66 |
| House Finch | 4 | Ovenbird | 61 |
| Common Yellowthroat | 3 | Tennessee Warbler | 53 |
| Unknown birda | 2 | Dark-eyed Junco | 26 |
| Chipping Sparrow | 1 | Ruby-throated Hummingbird | 23 |
| Virginia Rail | 1 | Black-and-white Warbler | 23 |
| Mourning Warbler | 1 | Lincoln's Sparrow | 19 |
| Red-eyed Vireo | 1 | Red-breasted Nuthatch | 18 |
Top ten most frequently colliding bird species (includes fatal and non-fatal collisions) across all collision surveys at all 21 monitored buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium, in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2017–2018. The “All seasons” count excludes mid-summer and winter periods when no collision monitoring occurred (see S2 and S3 Tables for counts of all species observed as collision casualties, including overall and by season, respectively).
aBirds that could not be identified to any taxonomic level, typically due to dismemberment and/or severe decomposition, distant viewing, and/or poor quality documentation photos.
Standardized coefficient estimates for variables in supported models for analyses including all 21 buildings.
| Prop. vegetation | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Height | Glass area | Prop. light | Area light | Footprint | Distance to river | 50 m buffer | 100 m buffer | |
| Total low raw count | - | 0.012 | - | - | - | - | 0.012 | - |
| Total high adj. estimate | - | 0.005 | - | - | - | 0.003 | - | |
| Spring low raw count | - | 0.036 | - | - | - | - | 0.048 | - |
| Fall low raw count | - | 0.019 | - | - | - | - | 0.016 | - |
| White-throated Sparrow | - | 0.051 | - | - | - | - | 0.089 | - |
| Nashville Warbler | - | 0.113 | - | - | - | 0.107 | - | |
| Ovenbird | - | 0.096 | - | - | - | - | 0.093 | - |
| Common Yellowthroat | - | 0.110 | - | - | - | - | 0.169 | |
| Tennessee Warbler | - | - | - | - | 0.230 | - | ||
| All seasons | - | 0.066 | 0.033 | 0.039 | - | |||
| Spring | - | 0.120 | 0.090 | - | - | - | 0.117 | |
| Fall | - | 0.049 | - | - | - | - | 0.049 | - |
Standardized coefficient estimates for variables included in strongly supported models for analyses of building-related variables associated with bird collisions based on monitoring at 21 buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium, in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2017–2018. Analyses were conducted for total collision fatalities across all seasons and for spring and fall, for total fatalities for the five species most frequently observed as collision casualties, and for numbers of species observed to collide across all seasons and for spring and fall. For results based on subset of 17 buildings with potential outliers excluded (stadium, #3, #4, and #17), see text and S4 Table. Coefficients in italics had non-standardized coefficient estimates with 95% CI’s that overlapped zero.
aAnalysis response variable was raw counts of total fatal collision casualties excluding birds potentially resulting from predation events and collisions with skyways connecting buildings.
bAnalysis response variable was bias-adjusted estimates of fatal collisions adjusted to account for removal of bird carcasses by humans and animal scavengers and for imperfect detection of carcasses present during surveys (this version of the bias-adjusted estimate was based on the high raw count of fatal collisions, which included birds potentially resulting from predation events and collisions with skyways connecting buildings).
cAnalysis response variable was raw counts of spring fatal collision casualties excluding birds potentially resulting from predation events and collisions with skyways connecting buildings.
dAnalysis response variable was raw counts of fall fatal collision casualties excluding birds potentially resulting from predation events and collisions with skyways connecting buildings.
eAnalysis response variables were low raw counts of fatal collision casualties for individual species, excluding birds potentially resulting from predation events and collisions with skyways connecting buildings.
fAnalysis response variables were total numbers of identifiable species observed as fatal and non-fatal collision casualties at each building.
Fig 3Correlates of numbers of collision fatalities (all buildings).
Relationships between high bias-adjusted estimates of bird collision fatalities (see text for description of this fatality estimate) and (a) glass area, and (b) proportion of land covered by vegetation within 50 m. The four buildings estimated to cause the greatest numbers of fatalities, including the stadium, are labelled (numbers represent unique numeric codes used for purposes of current study); For results based on 17 buildings with these 4 potential outliers removed, see text and S1 Fig.
Fig 4Correlates of numbers of species colliding (all buildings).
Relationships between total numbers of species observed as casualties (including both fatal and non-fatal collisions) and (a) glass area, (b) proportion of glass area with lighting emitted at night, and (c) proportion of land covered by vegetation within 50 m. The four buildings estimated to cause the greatest numbers of collisions, including the stadium, are labelled (numbers represent unique numeric codes used for purposes of current study); For results based on 17 buildings with these 4 potential outliers removed, see text and S2 Fig.