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New Brunswick

Bug diet of birds has dramatically declined in quality, researchers find

"You are what you eat" is the guiding principle behind a new study comparing the diet of birds today with that of birds dead for more than a century.

Birds dead for more than a century help researchers study how birds' diet has changed

A new recently published study looking at the diets of some bird species over the last century found drastic changes in the insects being eaten. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

"You are what you eat" is the guiding principle behind a new study comparing the diet of birds today with that of birds dead for more than a century.

The results show large changes in the diets of aerialinsectivores, or birds such as swallows, swifts, martins and whip-poor-wills thatconsume insects while in mid-flight.

Today, the bulk of the birds' diet is made up of small insects at the lower end of the food web, or at a lower "trophic" level, the researchers say.

"Higher up on a trophic level might be steak," said JoeNocera,anassistant professor of forestry and environmental management at the University of New Brunswick and one of the authors of the paper.

"Lower on a trophic level might be a salad.You'd have to eat a lot more salad to make up for that steak."

Choice of insects shrinks

For example, whip-poor-wills today still have to eat insects, Nocera said, but what they have to choose from isn't as beneficial as itwas 100 years ago.

Joe Nocera, an assistant professor of forestry and environmental management at UNB, is an author of the paper, along with Philina English and David Green of Simon Fraser University. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
Using stable isotopes, or molecules found in the food eaten by birds, researchers have been able to map the changes in diet for species such as whip-poor-wills back to the 1800s.

"It's a speciesthatusedto be common in New Brunswick, but isn't anymore," Nocerasaid. "Sowe looked at Ontariopopulations. And we wanted to know what's driving theirpopulationdeclines over the pastcentury."

Nocerasaid most species ofaerialinsectivores, including swifts andswallows, have been in severe decline and he thinks it's most likely aresponse todeclines in insectpopulations.

"But we don't know that," he said."We have terrible historical records on insect abundance in history."

UNB to study the environmental changes through dead birds and bats

7 years ago
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In a new study published last month in-part by a University of New Brunswick researcher, scientists are comparing heavy metals found in old stuffed bats and birds and comparing them to animals alive today to learn more about how the environment has changed over the last century, including pollution levels, long term ecological change.

Large collections of dead bugs gathered over decadesare nearly impossible to find, so the precise changes in the insect world can't be documented. But collections of dead birds areavailable.

By using museumspecimensof whip-poor-willscollected as far back as the1880s,researchers were able to determine what those birds consumed and compare their diets to birds of the same speciescollected this century.

Determining the diet of the birds that lived more than 130 years ago is done byexaminingstableisotopes, a type ofbiologicaltracer,found in the museum specimens.

"When a bird, or any animal for that matter,eats something, itincorporatesall the molecules of that item into its own tissues," said Nocera. "In the case of a bird, when it grows feathers it has the chemical makeup, partly, of whatit'sbeen eating."

The eastern whip-poor-will, named for its distinctive call, is declining in numbers across Ontario, and its diet has changed as well. (Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry)

By trackingnitrogenisotopesin the birds since 1880, researchers are able to also track their food intake.

"The long story short is that it has changed, and fairly dramatically, for both adults and chicks, over the past century," Nocerasaid.

The paper is titled"Stable Isotopes from Museum Specimens May Provide Evidence of Long-Term Change in the Trophic Ecology of a Migratory AerialInsectivore."

Written byPhilinaEnglish and DavidGreenof Simon Fraser University as well as Nocera, it was publishedlast month in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution.

Hail the collectors

The study's relianceon museum collections highlights the need to properly curate and maintain zoological collections.

Although nospecimensfrom the New Brunswick Museum were used in this study, the curator of zoology there,DonaldMcAlpine, said the study shows it's important to maintain and grow specimen collections for future research.

"At the time those collections wereassembled, the technology that is being used now didn't exist," McAlpinesaid. "People couldn't have imagined how these specimens would be used."

Once common in New Brunswick, whip-poor-wills are now regionally extinct in the province. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

McAlpine said the New Brunswick Museumhas about 13,000 birds in its collection andsends dozens of samples of specimens each year to researchers for similar studies.

"Some of these new technologies have allowed us to extract DNA, stableisotopes, to use birds fortoxicologicalwork," he said.

"They're being used in a wide variety of ways and this paper is a great demonstration of one of those ways, but also in how this technology is unlocking the stories thesespecimenshave to tell."

Research challenges

Determining the diet of birds that have been long dead was a challengefor the researchers.

"Stable isotopes are especially difficult to interpret at large scales," said English, theprimary author of the study."So eliminating alternative explanations for the patterns we found was particularly challenging."

"Also, because historical museum specimens were not collected with your particular future questions in mind, they are rarely distributed ideally to answer a particular question. New techniques that allow more and more detailed isotope information to be extracted from each specimen have the potential to make this easier."

But regardless of the difficulty of the study the research is significant, English said.

Donald McAlpine, the research curator head of zoology at the New Brunswick museum, says the study highlights the importance of museum collections that were started before anyone even considered the technology of DNA or stable isotope analysis. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

"This research is also especially important because it identifies key challenges in using this approach and the ways emerging techniques will help to overcome these challenges," she said.

The human impact

While changes in the diet of some birds may not seem drastic to some,Nocerawarned there is an impact onhumans.

"Insects drive all the pollination services that we avail ourselves of, whether that be fruits or vegetables produced throughpollination, ortreesproduced through pollination," he said.

"Without those insect services, I don't think we would have the quality of life we have today. It would actually be impossible."