Every year, up to meet an untimely death in New York City by colliding with building glass. During migration, artificial lights lure birds into the thick of the city, where they find themselves surrounded by a house of mirrors. Disoriented and exhausted, perhaps drawn to inviting vegetation reflected or framed by a window, they crash as they try to escape.
At a national scale, these losses pile up: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that as many as 988 million birds die in building-glass collisions each year. Thatâs more than 3,000 times the death toll from collisions with wind turbines. Others say the annual total likely reaches 1 billion birds.
These deaths are especially troubling in our age of major declines in bird populations. They are also preventable. Design decisions, choices of construction materials, and bird-friendly treatments added to existing windows can reduce collisions. And as Lights Out programs around the country are finding, turning off nonessential lighting during migration keeps many birds out of harmâs way.
We wanted to better understand the building-collision problem and give readers a fuller sense of its impact. So, we used BirdCast, a migration forecasting tool created by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, to choose a date when a flood of birds was expected to pass through the city. On May 16 we sent reporters and photographers out with volunteers from (PSF), an effort led by New York City ĂÛèÖAPP to document birds that strike buildings and windows across the city during migration. We also dispatched a team to (WBF), the Manhattan wildlife rehabilitation facility that takes in and treats injured birds brought to them by PSF volunteers and good Samaritans across the city.
What follows are the scenes and stories of a single day of spring migration in New York. The dead and injured birds we encountered were among 62 individuals collected by PSF volunteers that week. The previous week, volunteers found 138 birds. But the program covers just 47 buildings and locates only a slim fraction of birds involved in collisions. Whatâs more, these incidents are much more common in the fall, when first-time migrants that hatched over the summer swell the number of migrantsâand collisions.
City leaders have taken steps to address this problem, including a 2019 law that requires bird-safe building materials for new construction, and another in 2021 that directs city-owned buildings to shut off nonessential lighting during migration. Other cities and some states have passed similar measures recently. At the federal level, the Bird-Safe Buildings Act would require new or remodeled government buildings to use materials shown to reduce collisions. Congress has mulled the bill since 2010 but has not yet passed it.
For now, birds face innumerable perils as lead them through our cities and towns. Fortunately, they are helped along their way by caring people who do what they can to make their homes and workplaces safer, and by the dedicated professionals and volunteers who do their best to save those that fall.
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WBF
Midnight: A gentle breeze is blowing from the southwest. Riding this light tailwind, some are at this moment navigating the vast obstacle course that is Manhattan. Many have come thousands of miles already. Some have hundreds of miles to go before they reach their nesting grounds. All told, close to 230,000 birds will fly over or between the boroughâs gauntlet of buildings on this night alone. Or try to.
WTC
5:40: Itâs a cool, 58-degree morning in Manhattanâs Financial District. A breeze is kicking off the Hudson River, swirling through the World Trade Center Complex. Iâm here to meet Melissa Breyer, a volunteer for PSF. This area, with its gleaming glass towers, is particularly deadly.
Iâm a half-hour early to our meeting spot at 4 World Trade Center (4WTC), so I walk around the building by myself, scanning for dead or dazed birds. Joggers pass by in the dim morning light as, across the street, a maintenance man trims the shrubs around the 9/11 Memorial. Suddenly I see a small lump up aheadâa bird huddled in an alcove. My breath catches. An Ovenbird. It looks alive. It is alive! What do I do? Do I grab it? I approach slowly for a closer look, but it flits up to a nearby tree and disappears. Maybe it was just stunned. Maybe itâs okay. Maybe thatâs a good sign for the day.
6:00: I meet Breyer at the corner of 4WTC. This is her sixth season with PSF. She began during the pandemic in 2020 and has recently drawn attention to the issue of window strikes by documenting the birds she finds on Twitter. A few minutes later, photographer and fellow PSF volunteer Andrew Garn joins us. Heâs holding a dead female Common Yellowthroat he just found alongside the building, the first official casualty of the day.
As we begin walking her route, Breyer scans for birds. âI find them in the gutter sometimes. I find them in the street. I look all around,â she says. âA lot of times, after they hit, theyâll fly to a tree and then die. So, Iâll find them under trees a lot.â Iâm suddenly less hopeful for my Ovenbird.
At this point, she explains, weâre already a little late to find birds injured or killed overnight, since some building maintenance crews are already out cleaning the sidewalks. Theyâve been coming out earlier and earlier, she says, which means that Breyer and other volunteers need to one-up them to get accurate counts. âItâs like an arms race,â she jokes drily. Last nightâs huge flight at low altitude has Breyer thinking we could have a busy morningâmost strikes happen below roughly 100 feet, where birds spend the most time foraging, and where glass reflects vegetationâbut itâs always hard to say: âYou can never predict.â
On the south side of 1WTC, we find the dayâs second dead bird, a female Blackburnian Warbler on the sidewalk, her two white wing bars and butter-yellow head giving her away. Breyer puts the bird in a plastic bag, writing down the species, location, and time to keep track of each victim.
Then, around the corner, we spot a male American Redstart under some trees. Itâs alive but breathing heavily. âDonât get too close,â Breyer cautions as she begins to approach. I hang back, but the bird is alert enough to dart to a tree above as she gets closer. Unable to retrieve it, we continue on to the north side of 1WTC, where we find a dead female American Redstart.
6:15: I ask about the cleaning crews and doormen posted like sentries outside the buildings. Are they helpful or defensive? âThey all vary,â Breyer says. âSome are really, really nice, and they care. I do think they arenât really encouraged to help us.â They are also extremely sensitive about any photography of the building facades or workers. âEven one of the guys that Iâm really tight with here doesnât like me taking photos,â she says as we head to 7WTC.
6:24: Finding dead birds also requires looking up. Breyer carefully inspects any glass awningsâhefty, cantilevered structures above many building entrywaysâfor the crumpled bodies of last nightâs victims. On the north side of 7WTC we find a dead bird in the street. âAnother yellowthroat. Female,â Breyer says. âYou know whatâs crazy, last week it was all males.â This could be a result of male birds migrating before females so they can stake out breeding territories.
Not 15 feet away lies another lifeless birdâa male Chestnut-sided Warbler, a gorgeous species considered a treat for birders. It has the unfortunate distinction of being Breyerâs first this season.
6:34: Foot traffic is increasing. The city is waking up. Madeleine Marrin, a first season PSF volunteer, has joined us. I ask her how she got involved. âI saw a birding account that I follow on Instagram posting about it, so I went to the info session,â she says. She wasnât even a birder before that.
Weâve finished our first loop around Breyerâs route, so we head a few blocks south to Brookfield Place, a large, mixed-use complex directly on the riverfront. Brookfield is part of another PSF volunteerâs route, but Breyer is covering for them this morning. Walking along a landscaped divider separating the sidewalk from a bike lane, she scans the mulch and plants. âA lot of times, if people find a dead bird, theyâll put it in a planter.â
As we approach Brookfield, Breyer points out the âunfortunateâ scaffolding where part of the complex is being renovated. Wooden panels on top of the scaffolding often catch dazed or dead birds, preventing volunteers from collecting them. We go straight to a spot where Breyer regularly finds birds, but there are none today. Next, Breyer opens a door to the buildingâs main atrium. âWeâre gonna go inside and peek on top of the scaffolding.â From a stairwell inside, we look out over the wood paneling. Nothing.
6:49: Weâre back outside. The morning sun is starting to filter through downtownâs skyscrapers, their facades glinting against the clear blue sky. Breyer stops below a glass skywalk that bridges the street and connects two Brookfield buildings. Transparent dots have been applied to it to deter bird strikes. âThis skywalk used to be really bad âŠâ she says, her voice trailing off as something catches her attention. âThereâs a bird across the street.â She cuts across the road in a flash. Sneaking up behind the bird âlike a cat,â Breyer firmly but gently grabs it with a banderâs grip, securing the head between the pointer and middle fingers. âI wanted to get it before it flew,â she says as she places the male American Redstart in a paper bag, where it will remain until we can get it to Wild Bird Fund for treatment. âI could tell it was alive from over there.â
Meanwhile, around the corner, Marrin has found a Swamp Sparrow that wasnât as lucky. Then, at the south end of Brookfield, we find another male Common Yellowthroat, dead.
7:02: âThis stretch of Brookfield is pretty bad,â Breyer says. Weâre entering the large waterfront plaza on the west side of the complex. Flanked by restaurants and bars, the area is also loaded with trees and lush sitting areas surrounded by shrubbery. From the greenery, the calls of a migrating Eastern Wood-Peewee and Northern Parula ring out. We donât find any birds here this morning, but itâs easy to see why this area is so dangerous: What looks like great habitat to a travel-weary bird draws them into the disorienting cityscape and becomes a death trap.
7:07: We head toward 4WTC to run Breyerâs route again. âOn busy days, Iâll do 12 miles,â she says. We donât find anything on a second pass, which surprises Breyer. Itâs a slow day for her, but still eye-opening to me.
7:21: This time, as we walk back to Brookfield, Breyer detours us along a median between West Street and a bike lane. As she weaves through conical cement barriers, she suddenly spots a female Common Yellowthroat, at least 50 feet from any building. The bird is on a sewer lid, smashed to smithereens after being run over by a bike. Breyer doesnât always pick up a bird when itâs been destroyed this badly, but today she does. Her ability to find birds in surprising spots comes from experience. âI donât think anyone would think to look over there,â she says about the bike lane. Passing a street cleaner hosing off the sidewalk, she motions toward the street. âThis is why I check the curbs,â she says. âA lot of time, theyâll spray them off.â
7:27: From the street, Breyer points up to the glass railing running the length of Liberty Park, an elevated green space across the street from the tree-flanked memorial. Below the railing is a living wall loaded with plants. This glass barrier, invisible to birds flying between patches of vegetation, used to be another major hazard. âWeâd just find birds all along here,â Breyer says. âDozens of birds at a time.â After Breyer and others drew attention to the issue, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which manages the park, applied dots to the glassâsave for 10 panels that were blocked by construction at the time, Breyer reports. As she shares this history, we spot a bird in the road below: a live Common Yellowthroat. It likely hit one of the dot-free panels. âIâm still finding birds at these 10 panels,â Breyer says.
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7:32: Volunteers Laura Lincks and Alice Winkler arrive at 10 Columbus Circle, an enormous building whose glass facade curves along the traffic circle at the southwest corner of Central Park. To the trained eye, itâs an obvious high-risk building for bird collisions. Lincks, who monitored this site last fall, says she would sometimes find as many as seven dead or injured birds here in a day. Winkler brings along her regular patrolling partner, her eight-year-old terrier, Sawyer. âHe gets an extra long walk on these days,â she says.
Lincks and Winkler immediately find a gorgeous gray-and-yellow bird on the sidewalk: a male Canada Warbler. âI guess thatâs the closest Iâll ever get to one,â Lincks says. Heâs tipped on his side with eyes cracked open and legs outstretched. The volunteers gently brush his legs. Theyâre stiff, and he doesnât flinch, confirming heâs dead. Lincks wanted to be sure: A couple weeks ago she found a Louisiana Waterthrush at this exact spot that perked up when she got close. She was able to for treatment. Although the work can be upsetting, Lincks says, âholding him in my hand for a few seconds and looking at him was actually very magical.â
As Lincks and Winkler observe and record the warbler, taking photos and noting his precise location, a couple of passersby stop for a moment. âThe other day I found three dead birds in a row here,â one says, and asks whatâs killing them. The volunteers explain about glass and reflections, and the passersby shake their heads. An off-duty security guard leaving the building notices the cluster of people and calls inside for the maintenance crew to dispose of the bird.
Lincks and Winkler scan the sidewalks from the edge of the building to the gutter and look up at the glass awnings over the doors, where Winkler often spots dead birds on her patrols. Lincks is wearing binoculars around her neck to aid such an examination, if necessary, but the awnings are empty.
WTC
7:40: At the corner of Brookfieldâthe exact spot where we found the stunned American Redstart earlierâwe now find a Common Yellowthroat, also alive. Breyer is also able to snag this bird. âA lot of the time they hold onto my finger, which is kind of heartbreaking,â Breyer says as she pulls her hand out of the bag after placing the yellowthroat inside. âSometimes I put a little cloth in the bottom for them to hold onto.â Along with recording the location and species, she takes a picture of each recovered bird to have a time stamp. âI want the data to be perfect,â she says.
WBF
7:45: Itâs a perfect spring morning in Manhattanâs Upper West Side, clear sky and 65 degrees. We ring the doorbell at WBF, and are greeted by rehabber Lily Lugoâand the pungent smell of pigeon poop. Sheâs stacking pigeon cages and getting organized for what could be a busy day. âWeâll see what happens,â she says. âIt was high migration last night. Iâm kind of nervous.â
A longtime animal caretaker who previously worked at the Queens and Central Park zoos, Lugo started volunteering at WBF in August 2020. She was hired full time in October 2021 and promoted to rehabber in March. (She also makes .) Lugoâs primary responsibility is songbird care, so sheâll be our guide for the day as we await any collision patients that might come in. Other staff will spend most of the day administering food and medicines to 550 patients in the background as we focus on intaking new patients.
WTC
7:47: On our second loop of Brookfield, we find another yellowthroat, smack in the same corner spotâagain. But this one is dead. âStill warm,â Breyer says as she picks up the male. Weâd just been here. We only walked around the building once. And yet in that time, a bird had died. Died after surviving who knows what for who knows how many miles from its starting point, likely somewhere in Mexico or Central America. It all seems so unfair and so unnecessary.
7:51: Breyerâs phone pings. Itâs a text from Hilary Berliner, an off-duty volunteer who found a bird on her way to work. Another Common Yellowthroat. They must have had a big flight last night. Berliner is asking how to contact a PSF listserv, which volunteers use to coordinate shifts and ID birds, to see if someone can take the bird to WBF for her.
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7:53: On the walk to the second and final address on their route, Lincks and Winkler talk about how they started volunteering with PSF. Both have been involved with animal-focused causes for years, but Winkler, at least, is relatively new to birding. Like many, she started paying more attention to the birds around her during the pandemic. She had never really considered the risks birds face as they navigate the cityscape. Now, she sees those dangers as part of a larger story of declining species of all kinds, often due to human activity. Volunteering with PSF is a small, but concrete, action she can take to protect them.
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8:00: Weâre getting close to wrapping up, but Breyer wants to check out the bad corner at Brookfield âone last timeâmy famous last words.â Good thing we do: We find a dead female Northern Parula not too far from the spot where we found the redstart and two yellowthroats. This one clearly hit a nearby, decal-free skywalk in the 15 minutes weâve been gone. âThatâs why itâs so hard for me to leave,â Breyer says.
Our count stands at 15 birds. Four are alive and in Breyerâs bag awaiting transportâthree Common Yellowthroats and an American Redstart. When storing and transporting live birds, âthe most important thing is that theyâre just in a dark and quiet place,â Breyer says. She can typically fit 15 brown paper bags with birds inside in a large shopping bag, but on busy days, when she runs out of space, sheâll clip small bags to the outside of the larger one. âSometimes the birds are really active in there,â she tells me. âSometimes Iâll have two bags. Itâs like the hospice bag and the waiting room bag.â
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8:04: Lincks and Winkler arrive at 590 Madison Avenue. Neither has yet found a dead or injured bird at this address, which NYC ĂÛèÖAPP added to the route this spring. After looping around the building, they stop a moment to look into the tree-filled atrium, wondering aloud if the several House Sparrows flitting between tables are all right in there.
The dead Canada Warbler is the Columbus Circle routeâs only bird: an easy day, and not too depressing. Lincks and Winkler linger to talk about the morning and their experience volunteering. âI think the word needs to get out to the general public, because they donât know,â Winkler says about window collisions. âThey get very upset when they find out.â
WTC
8:09: We begin our final sweep of the morning. The city is fully awake, buzzing with rush-hour energy. âThis is when I start seeing my colleaguesâI work in this building,â Breyer says as we pass Brookfield Place. Itâs a twist I did not see coming. âA lot of times when they see me, I have a dead bird in my hand, hair sticking straight up.â We donât see any coworkers this morning, but we do meet a cleaning guy Breyer is friendly with. âMorning! Find any birds today?â he asks cheerfully. So far, heâs had a quiet morning himself. âHopefully it stays like that,â he says. âA good day.â
WBF
8:10: The first rescuer of the day brings in a European Starling fledgling, discovered on the ground under its nest. She was walking along 85th Street when a bystander pointed out the young bird sitting on the sidewalk. She took it home and held it in her hands to calm it down, before bringing it to Columbus Avenue for treatment. âI hope itâs gonna be okay,â she says. Lugo administers an anti-mite treatment and, to keep the fledgling warm, puts it in a brooder where, over the course of the day, it will be joined by 25 more starling fledglings.
In spring they are among WBFâs most common patients due not to injury but to good intentions. Most fledglings on the ground should be left alone; their parents are nearby and feeding them. But that doesnât stop people from ârescuingâ what appears to be a helpless baby bird.
WTC
8:24: With no more birds found and foot traffic heavy, we call it a morning and catch an uptown 2 train toward WBF. âAnd now Iâm just the crazy lady with birds on the train,â Breyer jokes as she puts the bag next to her on the seat. She promptly pulls out a stack of entry forms from her backpack and begins filling them out to expedite the drop-off process. âIt can get pretty busy there,â she says. âA lot of times people will be in the vestibule filling out their information. I just walk in and drop them off.â
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8:25: Finished for the day, Lincks and Winkler head home. They each make a habit of walking through Central Park on their way, appreciating the abundance of living birdsâanother reason Lincks brings along her binoculars. âWe are stewards to hundreds of beautiful birds who pass through our city,â Lincks says. âWeâre so lucky!â
WBF
8:39: While we wait for new patients, the staff go about their morning routines. Luis Ochoa puts together a meal for goslings: homemade pond muckâgreens blended with bloodworms and thiamineâplus some lettuce and birdseed. Meanwhile Suzanne Highland feeds the starling fledglings, who mechanically purr pshh pshh while hopping around their temporary shelter in the front window of the clinic.
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8:45: Berlinerâs email has hit the listserv, and sheâs still looking for someone to take the bird she found up to the clinic. We decide to pick it up. We make plans to meet her outside her workplace and head to Lexington Avenue to catch a downtown train.
WTC
8:49: Heading uptown on the train, Breyer says that, along with logging data on her volunteer shifts for PSF, she reports birds she finds while off-duty to , a platform NYC ĂÛèÖAPP created for tracking bird mortality. She also logs her data on the app , and keeps a Google Sheet with info on every bird she has found. She guesses the total sits around 1,300 birds. Among the most unexpected species sheâs found in the city: Virginia Rail, Sora, and a Chuck-willâs-widowâa secretive and odd-looking nightjar that she found on an awning. âThat was really astonishing,â she says of .
9:02: We emerge from underground on the Upper West Side. Itâs shaping up to be a gorgeous spring day. At sidewalk cafes people sip coffees and eat pastries as we walk past with our bag full of live birds.
At WBF, two people are outside filling out intake forms. Lugo greets Breyer with a warm welcome. Kneeling in the doorway, Breyer hands over the paperwork and each bag for processing. With some luck, these birds will recover quickly and be released to continue their journeys.
WBF
9:23: The birds Breyer dropped off are resting quietly in the brown paper bags they arrived in. When they start moving againâârattling around in there,â says Rita McMahon, WBF founder and directorâit means theyâre ready for an examination.
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9:26: We meet Berliner on a street corner not far from Union Square. She typically patrols the West Street route on Saturdays, but this morning she found a stunned Common Yellowthroat while walking to the school where she works as a math specialist. Itâs not the first time sheâs come across birds at that particular building: âI always loop around it, because Iâve found a lot there.â
Luckily, Berliner was prepared: She had a paper bag and was able to scoop up the warbler and take him with her to school. âI just had it quietly on my desk, and I had a kindergartener in there I was working with, and I was like, please donât make any noise.â The yellowthroat is mostly quiet in his bag but rustles around as Berliner hands him off. We say goodbye and head back to the train to make the trip uptown.
WBF
9:27: A Mourning Dove is dropped off, found on the ground at 425 Amsterdam Avenue. Itâs bleeding. The diagnosis: cat attack. The bite went through the wing; McMahon suspects itâs a compound fracture. A cat bite also transmits an infection-causing bacterium, which is treated with Clavamox. If the vets can get Clavamox into a cat victim within 24 hours, itâll typically recover, so long as it can heal from its injuries. Longer than that and it will be a harder fight.
McMahon carries the dove downstairs to a treatment room off the main pigeon facility and prepares to administer oxygen with isofluorane gas, a general anesthetic. Once the bird is unconscious, McMahon can do a thorough examination without causing additional pain. That exam will help her decide whether the dove needs to be euthanized. âItâs very subdued for a Mourning Dove, which indicates internal injuries,â she says. She cradles the bird on a towel, places a gas mask on its face, and waits for its eyes to close.
Once the bird is under, McMahon flips it onto its back and extends its wing. The underside is bleeding from a wound, and feathers are torn with broken shafts. âShh, shh, shh,â McMahon soothes the sleeping dove. The bird is limp and breathing gently. The medical report: Wrist, radius, and ulna are broken. Itâs a compound fracture. âHe has to go,â she says.
WTC
9:35: Considering last nightâs huge flight, I head to Central Park to check out the birding scene. The paths and roads are swarming with runners and walkers. The trees buzz with birdsong.
At The Loch, a densely wooded area with a stream, birders and photographers huddle in groups and scurry from one area to the next, sharing intel as they pass. Apparently a Hooded Warbler is singing up the path, and a Canada Warbler was recently spotted along the stream. Black-throated Blue Warbler, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Northern Waterthrushâthe list grows by the minute.
Sitting on a bench, an English birder who traveled to New York just for spring migration looks overwhelmed as he tries to record all the birds heâs seen. âThis is the best birding in my life,â he says, shaking his head in disbelief.
WBF
9:48: McMahon pulls .3 mL of pink Pentobarbitol into a syringe. She grasps the dove in her left hand and injects the medicine into its chest cavity. For a few minutes it sits there on the towel, flickering its eyelids and occasionally opening and closing its beak. âHeâs dreaming,â McMahon tells me.
We stay with the bird through its death. âHe feels no pain,â she says. She holds a stethoscope to his chest to see if heâs still with us. He is. But only for a few more moments.
9:55: Amanda Parsels, a PSF volunteer, arrives after her route through the Financial District, which covers South Street Seaport to the Staten Island Ferry launch. She often finds birds that collided with buildings along FDR Drive. âThere are lots of collisions coming over the water,â she says. She drops off an Ovenbird and a Black-throated Green Warbler; the bags are placed with the other warblers in the intake room to quiet down.
10:02: One of the bags Breyer dropped off starts rattling. That means itâs time for Lugo to check on the collision victims. The first patient: an American Redstart, recovered from the east facade of 200 Liberty Place, part of the Brookfield Place complex. Lugo pulls the chirping songbird out of the paper bag, its head peeking out between her two fingers. âItâs pretty reactive, so this is great,â she says. She releases the alert bird inside a basket on top of a digital scale. It weighs eight grams: âStill tiny,â Lugo says. She checks if its wings are uneven, then places it on the table so she can wrap a piece of marked tape around its ankleâa hospital bracelet for a warbler.
Lugo picks the bird back up to show it to us. Seconds later, the redstart escapes her hands and zips around the room, flying to the ceiling before hiding behind an emergency battery for the brooder. âThis is bound to happen,â she says. Lugo quickly recovers the redstart and puts it in a soft carrier bag.
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10:15: After a packed train and a transfer, we make it to WBF. Berliner had already printed and filled out an intake form, so our handoff with the staff there is quick and easy.
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10:21: Another bag is rattling, and Lugo pulls out a female Common Yellowthroat. She is checking if the bird, recovered from the west facade of 4WTC, has any visible injuries when it breaks free from her hands and starts flying frantically around the room. As Lugo looks for a small net, the yellowthroat squeezes itself through the cracked-open door (our bad!) and escapes into the lobby. Lugo says this happens often (âFirst time happening to me, thoughâ), but itâs inconvenient for the staff and unsafe for the birds. âWe donât like it when it happens,â McMahon says. The search for the loose warbler is on.
10:33: As the female yellowthroat lurks somewhere in the lobby, we turn to other patients. Just like the previous two birds, a 10-gram male Common Yellowthroat jumps out of Lugoâs hand. But this time, she is ready with a net. âThey are escape artists,â she says.
Taking flight may seem like a sign of good health for a collision victim. But itâs not necessarily the case, Lugo says: Birds can have internal damage or a concussion after hitting a window. WBF keeps all collision victims for at least three days to monitor their health before releasing them back to the wild.
10:37: Now itâs another male Common Yellowthroatâs turn for patient intake; Breyer recovered him from the east facade of 200 Liberty Street. He chirps loudly when Lugo takes him out of the paper bag. âAngry little dude,â Lugo says. This time, she grasps him quite strongly to prevent escape. After weighing, he joins the redstart and yellowthroat in a soft carrier bag.
10:42: We have one last Common Yellowthroat to process, but this one is in a different mood than the rest. The 12-gram male sits quietly on a towel inside the scale basket when Lugo weighs himâno fluttering about and no escape attempts. We breathe a sigh of relief when he hops around a little and chirps.
As we wind down the intake operation, we hear a triumphant yell from the lobby. Nearly 30 minutes after it escaped the intake room, McMahon has finally recovered the female Common Yellowthroat. The bird hid behind a turtle aquarium for some time, and later near a washing machine. McMahon holds her tightly and brings her to the intake room for weighing and tagging.
10:59: Ochoa and Lugo don surgical dress and enter a back room to feed the largest collision victim currently in WBFâs care: a Red-tailed Hawk. The raptor, admitted to WBF on May 12, is suffering from head trauma from colliding with a car or building windowâits retina is displaced from the impact. Ochoa checks on its eyes using a flashlight before he and Lugo feed it liquified food, water, and medicine. âHis eyeâIâve never seen anything so bad on a hawk before,â Lugo says. âThat was a pretty bad collision.â
Raptors usually spend a week at most at WBF for stabilization treatment. âThey never spend, like, a month here,â Ochoa says. âUnfortunately they almost always either die before that, or we transport them to a raptor sanctuary in New Jersey.â The Raptor Trust, located about 20 miles west of Newark, hosts an advanced raptor medical facility (including intensive care) and large outdoor aviary cages where birds too injured for release can live out the rest of their days.
McMahon remarks that today is a slow day. By its end, 74 new patients will have arrived. In contrast, WBF last week had its second-busiest day ever, with 110 birds brought in on May 13. Overall, this yearâs patient count is high. McMahon hasnât done a full analysis, but sheâs so far seen a 38 percent increase for this time of year. Whatâs driving it? It could be early migration inflating this yearâs count, more collisions, more migratorsâor that more people know to bring injured birds to WBF for care.
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11:08: After dropping off the yellowthroat at WBF, we head to NYC ĂÛèÖAPPâs 15th floor office on West 23rd Street, where Katherine Chen is looking over the latest data submitted by PSF volunteers. Chen oversees the project, along with the organizationâs other community science work, like horseshoe crab monitoring, which overlaps with spring migration. She will eventually do a thorough check of all the data, and all bird IDs, but right now sheâs looking for obvious mistakes. She spots one: A volunteer marked their patrol time as âPMâ not âAM.â Chen corrects the time and keeps scrolling. With 122 volunteers monitoring 13 routes, there are lots of data.
Having reviewed all the entries submitted so far today, Chen takes a break from the massive spreadsheet. Before she joined NYC ĂÛèÖAPP, Chen was already researching building collisions as an ecology masterâs student. She volunteered as a monitor in fall 2021, patrolling the Central Park North route. She sees direct value in the project: âIt helps us understand collisions and whatâs causing them,â she says, âAnd also the effects of retrofits.â
Chen keeps tabs on retrofits, when buildings around the city install window treatments and other collision-deterrents, sometimes in consultation with NYC ĂÛèÖAPP. When the building in question is part of a PSF route, she says, monitoring often shows the retrofits were highly effective at reducing collisions and bird deaths. (PSF data showed that the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, for example, was once among the cityâs top bird killers. But changes recommended by NYC ĂÛèÖAPP and implemented in 2013 led to a more than 90 percent decrease in collisions at the site.) And if volunteers are still finding dead and injured birds, they can follow up with building management and suggest fixes. âItâs always great to see buildings get retrofitted and make the city safer,â Chen says, âBut we also want to see legislation that affects more than just individual buildings.â
NYC ĂÛèÖAPP has already helped secure some policy wins: A 2019 law requires all construction projects begun since January 2021 to use bird-friendly materials on exteriors up to 75 feet off the ground, where birds are most likely to strike, among other requirements. In December of that year, the city council also passed âLights Outâ legislation requiring all city-owned buildings to turn off nonessential outdoor lighting between 11 pm and 6 am during fall and spring migration. It was a major victory, Chen says, but one that applies only to a small percentage of the cityâs buildings. The organization is supporting to extend the rule to privately owned buildings.
Chen says this work has permanently changed her perspective on the cityâs iconic skyline. âIâll be walking with my friends, and they say, âOh, thatâs a cool building!â And Iâm just thinking, thatâs a lot of glass.â
WBF
11:12: Lugo returns to the intake room to process the patients Parsels brought in a little over an hour ago. An Ovenbird, weighing 19 grams and found at 80 Maiden Lane, is subdued on the scale. âQuiet,â she remarks. Then a striking Black-throated Green Warbler, found by 55 Water Street, fights to escape Lugoâs grip: âHeâs angry.â He weighs nine grams. They join the redstart and yellowthroats in the soft carrier.
11:23: Lugo picks up the warbler-filled carrier and totes it down the stairs to the songbird rehabilitation room, known as the flyway, where birds rest in cloth carriers. She transfers the quiet Ovenbird into a carrier with five other quiet Ovenbirds. Lugo calls them âquiet guysââsongbirds that are less feisty, perhaps indicating they need more rest and recovery (or are on the downswing). She always puts the quiet guys together, ideally grouped by species.
She swats overhead: âSorry about the black soldier flies.â WBF staff keep fly grubs here to feed the birds, and any that hatch into adult flies are used for enrichment to keep the songbirds active and in good hunting practice.
There are at least a dozen stacked soft carriers holding different kinds of birds. One houses several Scarlet Tanagers; another contains thrushes and, in another, vireos. Thrushes and vireos will fight other songbirds, so they must be separated. âVireos are feisty,â Lugo says.
Beyond âquiet guys,â there are two other main rehab categories: âBAR guys,â for bright, alert, and reactive,â and âADR guys,â which means they âainât doing right,â Lugo says. BAR guys are pretty much ready for release, as long as theyâre flying well and their eyes are healthy. ADR guys are not doing well, and the rehabbers arenât sure what is wrong with them.
Our new arrivalsâthe Common Yellowthroats, American Redstart, Ovenbird, and Black-throated Greenâwill stay here for a few days to recover, dining on black soldier fly grubs, mealworms, waxworms, and crickets. Like all other collision patients, theyâll be dosed with an anti-inflammatory medication called medicam. If theyâre classified as BAR guys in a couple days, theyâll be released in nearby Central Park. Others will spend more time in rehab. However, the longer they stay here, the more likely it is that their collision injuries are fatal. Most are: Only 39 percent of collision victims are ultimately released, McMahon says, although warblers overall have a higher survivorship than particularly susceptible species like American Woodcock, which struggle to recover after striking a building.
1:35: After lunch, itâs time to release the BAR guys that have already spent several days at WBF regaining their strength. Lugo loads three soft carriers, each containing songbirds, into shopping bags and we set off for Tannerâs Spring, a popular birding spot in Central Park.
1:51: There is a small group of birders gathered when we reach the natural spring protected by boughs of overhead foliage. Lugo sets the soft carriers on a stone bench next to a seated birder. We stand back and wait. First she releases a group of six songbirds: Common Yellowthroats, mainly. They fly out, one by one, zoom ahead and then loop up and away. One lands in a tree nearby; we peer at it through binoculars. Then a Red-bellied Woodpecker struggles to find the exit of its carrier before flying off to a distant tree. Lastly a Worm-eating Warbler hops around with the carrier door open for a full minute before it, too, flies free and lands on a tree nearby. The mood is light and optimistic as we consider the trials the birds have survived and the long journeys they have before them.
Behind us, a Blue Jay pesters a small songbird right near the spot where the Worm-eating Warbler had alighted. Then ĂÛèÖAPP social media manager Luz Muñoz Huber, who joined us with her partner and dog for the release, hustles up beside us. âMy partner just saw a Blue Jay carrying off the Worm-eating Warbler,â she whispers. We stand horrified. Itâs disturbing that the songbird flew all this way from Central America or the Caribbean, survived a collision with a Manhattan building, spent days in recovery at WBFâonly to become prey when it had just rejoined the wild.
Itâs sad and brutal. But that is also the nature of rescue work. These birds make dangerous journeys every spring and fall. They face predators and bad weather, as well as human impacts like building collisions, car traffic, pollution, cat attacks, habitat destruction, and more. The workers at WBF spend their days giving every injured bird a chance to continue their migrations. But even when Lugo and the committed rehabbers are able to save a bird, they canât protect it forever. They can only send it back out into the world to make its own way.
Reporting by Andrew Del-Colle (World Trade Center Complex), Zoe Grueskin (Columbus Circle), and Kharishar Kahfi and Hannah Waters (Wild Bird Fund). Editorâs note: Grueskin, ĂÛèÖAPPâs editorial fellow, is a Project Safe Flight volunteer.