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Texans asked to turn off lights during migratory bird season / Public News Service

Texans asked to turn off lights during migratory bird season / Public News Service

The fall migration period of birds has begun and the nonprofit organization Defenders of Wildlife is trying to save as many birds as possible.

The Lights Out Texas! campaign calls on building owners, businesses, developers and homeowners to turn off non-essential lights at night to help keep birds oriented.

Azalia Rodriguez, the Texas representative for Defenders of Wildlife, said birds are attracted to the bright lights during nighttime flight and then collide with buildings in the early morning hours.

“Birds don’t understand the concept of glass, they don’t understand that it’s an invisible barrier,” Rodriguez said. “So when they see glass, they see a tree reflected in it and think it’s a habitat and try to fly into that habitat.”

Rodriguez said 70 percent of the collisions are fatal. It is estimated that nearly two billion birds fly through Texas from August 15 to November 30.

Several cities in the Austin area, the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, the Houston-Gulf Coast area, and El Paso in West Texas are participating in “Lights Out Texas!”

At birdcast.info you can determine the number of birds flying into a city in real time.

Rodriguez said collisions with buildings are the second leading cause of bird deaths in the United States.

“One billion birds die in the United States from collisions with buildings,” Rodriguez said. “It’s definitely a huge problem and it’s causing our population to decline. Collisions with buildings are actually the second biggest threat to birds.”

Cats are the biggest threat to birds.

The main migration dates in autumn are between September 5th and October 29th. The migration dates in spring are from March 1st to June 15th.

Disclosure: Defenders of Wildlife donates to our fund for coverage of climate change/air quality, endangered species and wildlife, energy policy, public lands/wilderness. If you would like to help us support news in the public interest, click here.

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