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If a lush, protected forest with a winding stream is considered luxury accommodation for a migratory bird, a Purdue University study shows that those birds would be just as happy with the equivalent of a cheap roadside motel.
''There are strategies for conserving forest for migratory birds, but those strategies emphasize the largest patches of forest,'' Dunning said. ''We found that even very small woodlots were filled with migratory birds at times. It makes us believe we also need to conserve the little patches of forest, not just the big ones.'' Dunning and graduate student Diane Packett observed woodlots at three distances from Indiana's Wabash River and its tributaries. They made observations in both spring and fall and reported their findings in the current issue of The Auk, the journal of the American Ornithologists' Union. There were 76 different species of migratory birds found in the woodlots, with no statistical differences in the number of species or overall population of birds based on distance from streams. Packett said the birds, which travel thousands of miles between South and Central America and Canada twice each year, sometimes just need a place to stop along their journey. As forests have been cleared for development, agriculture and other uses, those birds have to make do with whatever patches of forest they can find when they become tired or encounter bad weather. ''They don't make the trip all in one jump. It can be thousands of miles they have to fly,'' Packett said. ''They need safe places to stop, eat and rest. If they don't have that, they might not survive.'' Many urban areas or open fields aren't suitable for migrating birds because they are vulnerable to predators in these open habitats. That makes the small woodlots important refuges, according to the study.
Francisco Uviña, University of New Mexico
Hardscape Oasis in Litchfield Park
Ash Nochian, Ph.D. Landscape Architect
November 12th, 2025
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