LIS: Restaurant for Birds

LIS Long Island Sound "Bird Restaurant" -- with its seasonally changing menus

20210320

16. Plankton, Fish and Birds

Plankton, Fish, and Birds: Marine food webs in a changing world.

Brian Hoover, from Chapman University, Orange, CA

Ecology Graduate Group,  Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior,  University of California, Davis

bahoover@ucdavis.edu

Brian Hoover is a seabird ecologist who works on research vessels and island colonies in both the North Atlantic and North Pacific.  He completed a PhD at the University of California Davis working on the breeding biology of Leach's storm-petrels in Nova Scotia, and did his postdoctoral research on marine food webs at the Farallon Institute in Petaluma, California.  He is now a postdoctoral teaching fellow at Chapman University in southern California.

Brian's talk will discuss how seabirds are excellent tools for monitoring ocean health, as they are often conspicuous and easy to observe, and their survival and reproduction over time reflects conditions in the ocean. Seabirds are visible indicators of conditions and changes in complex marine ecosystems.  This talk will review some of the existing literature and background on "seabird as ocean environment indicators", and present results from a recent study that examined global data on seabirds from 46 colonies around the world. Early results suggest that fish-eating, surface foragers in the northern hemisphere are experiencing declines in their breeding productivity relative to seabirds in the southern hemisphere, and this may be associated with the ocean warming at a much faster rate in the northern hemisphere. Planktivores seem to be doing better, but we still need more data.  -- Any multi-year data on seabird colonies and numbers would be helpful, so please contact Brian if you have any.

His presentation video can be seen at this link:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIifB0rj7VM    ( COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube ) at the 4hours 55minute mark.

The computer file for the full presentation deck of slides will be made available at this link:  TBD. 

WANT TO LEARN MORE?   The references for Brian's presentation can be seen by clicking on this link:   Hoover Paper Links.docx - Google Docs  

Here is Brian's earlier presentation on Seabirds as Sentinels:  101521_Seabirds as Sentinels, by Brian Hoover  ( https://noaabroadcast.adobeconnect.com/p69193jvfhli/ )

Brian can also be contacted directly at:   bahoover@ucdavis.edu

Here are a few of the slides from Brian's presentation: 






20210310

17. Extinctions, Genetics and Future Possibilities

Avian Genetics:  We are living in a Genetic Revolution.

Cody Limber, 
Yale University, New Haven, CT
cody.limber@yale.edu


This presentation begins at 5 hours 18 minutes on the video recording of this conference:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube


We are in the midst of a genetic revolution. Over the past 20 years, the cost of sequencing a genome has come down from over a billion dollars to ~1,000 dollars as of 2020. This means that we are now able to sequence more genomes from different species across the tree of life. In part due to efforts like the 10k avian genomes project, we have full genomes from over 500 species representing 92% of avian families. 

What do we do with all these data? We can use genetic data to build trees. Not trees in the forest, but trees of life representing the evolutionary history of bird evolution and showing who is related to whom. Traditionally, this was done with morphological characters, but genetic data allows for increased resolution and accuracy. Genetics also allows us to describe new species. By comparing gene sequences from similar species, we are able to look for differences or similarities that enable us to make informed decisions about what to call a species. We can also analyze birds of unknown parentage genetically to reveal their family histories. 

Functional genetics is a new and expanding field asking questions about what these different genes in different species do and how they contribute to their unique morphologies. By comparing birds with different beak shapes, we are able to look for genes that may be involved in shaping these bills, something Darwin never even dreamed of doing. 

Genetics is also important in conservation especially in the face of the current biodiversity crisis. One area of concern looks at genetic diversity in species with small population sizes. Genetic diversity is extremely important in maintaining the health of a population and efforts to increase genetic diversity have had mixed success. There are also efforts to bring species that are extinct back to life. Although we are able to sequence genomes from extinct species, we currently lack the knowledge and technology required to bring back these extinct species. Conservation money is better spent on preserving what we still have instead of bringing back the species we have lost. 

If you have questions, you can explore the references below, or contact me by email:  cody.limber@yale.edu


References:

(Bravo et al., 2021; Burga et al., 2017; Feng et al., 2020; Lamichhaney et al., 2015; Lane et al., 2021; Mussmann et al., 2017; Prum et al., 2015; Rosenberg et al., 2019; Toews et al., 2018)

Bravo, G.A., Schmitt, C.J., and Edwards, S.V. (2021). What Have We Learned from the First 500 Avian Genomes? Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 52. 

Burga, A., Wang, W., Ben-David, E., Wolf, P.C., Ramey, A.M., Verdugo, C., Lyons, K., Parker, P.G., and Kruglyak, L. (2017). A genetic signature of the evolution of loss of flight in the Galapagos cormorant. Science 356. 

Feng, S., Stiller, J., Deng, Y., Armstrong, J., Fang, Q., Reeve, A.H., Xie, D., Chen, G., Guo, C., and Faircloth, B.C. (2020). Dense sampling of bird diversity increases power of comparative genomics. Nature 587, 252-257. 

Lamichhaney, S., Berglund, J., AlmĂ©n, M.S., Maqbool, K., Grabherr, M., Martinez-Barrio, A., Promerová, M., Rubin, C.-J., Wang, C., and Zamani, N. (2015). Evolution of Darwin’s finches and their beaks revealed by genome sequencing. Nature 518, 371-375. 

Lane, D.F., Aponte Justiniano, M.A., Terrill, R.S., Rheindt, F.E., Klicka, L.B., Rosenberg, G.H., Schmitt, C.J., and Burns, K.J. (2021). A new genus and species of tanager (Passeriformes, Thraupidae) from the lower Yungas of western Bolivia and southern Peru. Ornithology. 

Mussmann, S., Douglas, M., Anthonysamy, W., Davis, M.A., Simpson, S., Louis, W., and Douglas, M. (2017). Genetic rescue, the greater prairie chicken and the problem of conservation reliance in the Anthropocene. Royal Society open science 4, 160736. 

Prum, R.O., Berv, J.S., Dornburg, A., Field, D.J., Townsend, J.P., Lemmon, E.M., and Lemmon, A.R. (2015). A comprehensive phylogeny of birds (Aves) using targeted next-generation DNA sequencing. Nature 526, 569. 

Rosenberg, K.V., Dokter, A.M., Blancher, P.J., Sauer, J.R., Smith, A.C., Smith, P.A., Stanton, J.C., Panjabi, A., Helft, L., and Parr, M. (2019). Decline of the North American avifauna. Science 366, 120-124. 

Toews, D.P., Streby, H.M., Burket, L., and Taylor, S.A. (2018). A wood-warbler produced through both interspecific and intergeneric hybridization. Biology letters 14, 20180557.















20210301

18. Data Mining Christmas Bird Counts 1920-2014

Tom Robben for Peter Auster, Mystic Aquarium and UConn. 


This presentation begins at 5 hours 33 minutes of the video recording:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube


In this project Prof. Peter Auster and others analyzed ten decades of CBC (Christmas Bird Count) data to compare the marine birds in three of the largest estuaries in the US Northeast (Delaware Bay, Long Island Sound, and Cape Cod / Massachusetts Bay), and how they are changing over time.  The CBC is probably the longest running citizen-science project in the United States, having begun in 1900.  This project is one example of the value of birders contributing to citizen-science, and some of the many uses that can be made of that contributed data. 

Here is Peter Auster's paper: 
“A Century of Change in the Avifauna of Three Large Northeast US Estuaries”
March 2017
“ an exploratory examination of ten decades of Christmas Bird Count (CBC) data to compare and contrast the winter avifauna along the coasts of Delaware Bay, Long Island Sound, and Cape Cod-Massachusetts Bay from 1920-2014. “
This is a good example of scientists using data collected by birders over one hundred years (the Christmas Bird Counts) to test hypotheses, to answer questions…



Click on this image to enlarge it, and then press the Esc key to return to normal view...