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In Mackenzie Delta, songbird wake-up a thing of the past

The sweet melodic sounds of songbirds have become a distant memory for some people in the Mackenzie Delta.

Bank swallow numbers down in Mackenzie Delta

11 years ago
Duration 2:03
Bank swallow numbers down in Mackenzie Delta

In the 1950s and 60s, Willie Simon didnt need an alarm clock.

Most of the time, youd be hearing birds, says Simon, a member of the Gwichin First Nation who lives in Inuvik.

Simon says he doesnt hear as many birds anymore, and hes not alone.

A new survey has found that people in the Mackenzie Delta are hearing fewer songbirds than in the past.

That has the Gwich'in Renewable Resources Board looking at how to protect at least one species.

The Gwich'in Renewable Resources Board will meet today to discuss whether to recommend the bank swallow be listed as a threatened species. (Sander Meertens/Shutterstock)

The board will meet today to discuss whether to recommend the bank swallow be listed as a threatened species.

The small, slender songbird, found across North America, breeds in the Mackenzie Delta.

The board has already received feedback from communities in the Delta.

There a few comments about how hunters will be listening for birds in the morning to help them wake up, says NatalkaMelnycky, who helped with the consultations. With the birds not around they have nothing to wake them up in the morning, especially when there's sunlight all time.

People across the delta also worry their silence is a signal of a bigger environmental problem.

If theres something hurting the birds, then theres probably another issue behind that, Melnycky says.