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As a curious teenager, Mary Bomberger Brown always looked forward to April, when she鈥檇 watch large shadows gather in the evening sky and assemble themselves on the Platte River in central Nebraska: some 500,000 Sandhill Cranes making their way north to breed in Canada. Occasionally, a few extra travelers would grace the brownish-gray flock. 鈥淵ou would see little groups of these great big, white birds, The Whoopers," Bomberger Brown recalls fondly. "It was an extra little treat to see the lovely, elegant creatures."
But that was the late 1970s, and since then something has changed. After decades of counting on Whooping Cranes to stop in Nebraska in April, Bomberger Brown, now a shorebird researcher at the University of Nebraska, noticed their earlier arrival about five years ago鈥攁s early as March. Their fall migration timing seemed to change, too. Rather than passing through in October on their way to the Gulf Coast, they visit in November. "It's just one of those patterns you start to notice if you're out enough," Bomberger Brown says.
So when Joel Jorgensen, a biologist with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, contacted her about collaborating on a study about Whooper migration, she was all ears. Jorgensen has worked with Whooping Cranes for nearly 12 years, and he, too, had noticed a shift in their migration. Acting at times as a caretaker for the birds, he says he needs to know when exactly they will touch down so his team can be ready to care for the critically endangered, wild population of around 300 birds.
鈥淎nybody who works with Whooping Cranes in the Central Flyway knows that their migration has changed,鈥 he says. But no one had published an official study on the topic. So the pair took it upon themselves to confirm their hunches. They analyzed data from the Cooperative Whooping Crane Tracking Project, run by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, that includes all confirmed Whooping Crane sightings in the Central Flyway between 1942 and 2016鈥攁 total of 2,806 observations. Combined, these observations tell the story of the population鈥檚 migrations between their Canadian breeding grounds and wintering areas along the Gulf of Mexico. The database showed them where birds were at a given time, and indicated when a mass exodus took place. The duo then compared these changes to average monthly temperature data from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The work was .
The results are striking: Over the past 75 years, Whooping Cranes' migration window has expanded by six weeks. The birds gain three weeks on either end of the migration. They began their northbound spring migration in 2016 approximately 22 days earlier than they did in 1942, while their southbound fall migration started approximately 21 days later.
Average temperatures in the Central Flyway during spring increased during the same period, which points to a link between climate change and crane migration. 鈥淔or a long time, ornithologists thought that they primarily migrate with day lengths,鈥 Bomberger Brown says. But days haven鈥檛 grown longer in the past 75 years. 鈥淭hey seem to be responsive to temperature,鈥 she says. In the fall, though, there was no temperature trend, a possible artifact of available data, the authors suggest.
It鈥檚 not clear what effect these changes in migration timing will have on the critically endangered population. 鈥淎t this point in time, we can't say that some of these changes that are occurring and related to changes in temperature are necessarily bad,鈥 Jorgensen says. 鈥淏ut I don't think it's all going to be positive.鈥