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Bird migration’s robust history – and fragile future

One can’t help but feel a sense of wonder reading about the bar-tailed godwit, a bird the size of a football, whose winter migration can take it from Alaska to New Zealand in one marathon flight across the Pacific Ocean. The ornithologists who’ve helped us understand the phenomenon of migration inspire wonder as well. Their ingenuity and zeal are at the heart of Rebecca Heisman’s delightful debut, “Flight Paths: How a Passionate and Quirky Group of Pioneering Scientists Solved the Mystery of Bird Migration.”

Heisman, a science writer who spent five years working for the American Ornithological Society, begins with an overview of the seasonal movement of birds. Some don’t migrate at all, while others are categorized as either short-, medium-, or long-distance travelers. “Flight Paths” focuses on the latter, birds that, once the urge to migrate is triggered, travel for improbably extended stretches, “chasing booms in the availability of insects and other key foods and the right conditions to nest and raise babies.” 

“Flight Paths: How a Passionate and Quirky Group of Pioneering Scientists Solved the Mystery of Bird Migration,” By Rebecca Heisman, Harper, 288 pp.

From there, the author proceeds chronologically, an astute choice that enables readers to appreciate how far scientists have come in understanding birds’ incredible journeys. We’re a long way from the 17th-century educator who was certain that birds migrated to the moon. The “gentleman ornithologists” the author features at the beginning of the book would regard more recent technological advances in tracking avian movement as the stuff of science fiction.

One significant method of studying birds, banding, has deep roots and is still popular today. Birds are gently captured in fine-meshed mist nets, and small numbered rings are attached to their legs in an attempt to trace their movements after release. While only a minute fraction of banded birds are found again, Heisman notes that the U.S. Geological Survey Bird Banding Laboratory annually distributes a million bands, so the numbers add up, yielding useful insights. Years of data have helped researchers determine that many birds are adjusting their migration schedules in response to climate change.

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