{"id":82173,"date":"2022-02-24T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-02-25T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-science-forum-bird-havens-on-a-trans-continental-journey\/"},"modified":"2022-02-24T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-02-25T07:30:00","slug":"alaska-science-forum-bird-havens-on-a-trans-continental-journey","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-science-forum-bird-havens-on-a-trans-continental-journey\/","title":{"rendered":"Alaska Science Forum: Bird havens on a trans-continental journey"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\t\t\t\t
By Ned Rozell<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n\t\t\t\t Right about now, songbirds in Brazil are shifting on their perches, feeling mysterious impulses that will soon make them leap off their branches and head toward Alaska.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t One of these birds is the olive-sided flycatcher, about as tall as your hand, with a blocky body and head. With good fortune, these birds will in a few months be fluttering into a forest swamp in Alaska, Canada or the Rocky Mountains, with a mission of replicating.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t Julie Hagelin has pulled on her Xtratufs to visit spruce wetlands in Alaska in search of the olive-sided flycatcher. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologist is co-author of a recent paper in which she and her colleagues have identified important areas that flycatchers from Alaska use when they leave each fall.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t The olive-sided flycatcher has a memorable song, the males singing “quick, three beers!” to attract a mate. They have one of the longest migrations of any North American breeding songbird — up to 7,000 miles one-way each spring and fall. Mated pairs of the birds don’t produce very many chicks (from two to four), and the birds live a long time (a tagged bird reached 11 years old).<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t And — if you are a child of the 1970s — about eight out of every 10 birds in the population have disappeared since you rode the bus to elementary school. The loss of olive-sided flycatchers is part of the 3 billion songbirds scientists estimate the world has lost since then.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t That steep decline is one of the reasons Hagelin wanted to study olive-sided flycatchers. From 2013 to 2018, she and her intrepid field team tromped into fragrant Alaska swamps of Labrador tea and black spruce trees to capture birds and fit them with geolocator tags. A geolocator weighs as much as a dollar bill, fitted on a bird as light as a stack of 13 pennies.<\/p>\n\t\t\t\t