The Southwest Is Facing an ‘Unprecedented’ Migratory Bird Die-Off

Scientists and birders have found large numbers of migratory species disoriented and dead in recent weeks. Here’s what we know so far.

A dozen dead Barn and Violet-green Swallows huddled together on the dusty desert floor of southern New Mexico. NumerousWestern Bluebirds packed into a crevice insouthern Colorado as if they panicked. Sparrows, lined up almostwing-to-wing, lying limply along the banks of the Rio Grande.

These are just a few of the grisly discoveries recently made in what is likely a mass death event for migratory birds occurring across theSouthwest. At the moment, there is no clear explanation.

The die-off is “unprecedented,” says , an avian ecologist at New Mexico State University (NMSU) in Las Cruces, who is leading the research team documenting the event. She estimates that hundreds of thousands and possibly even up to a millionbirds have died across at leastfive U.S. states and in four Mexican states. “It’s enormous, the extent of this,” Desmond says. “We haven’t counted all the species yet, but there are lots of species involved.” Online reports show dead owls, warblers, hummingbirds, loons, flycatchers, woodpeckers, and more—representing the heading southtotheir wintering grounds.

The exact reasons for the deathsaren’t yet known. A cold snap that brought snow, wind, and low temperatures on September 8 and 9 could have forced birds to migrate early or broughtdown birds already weak from migration. Similarly,wildfires raging along the West Coast might have spurredpremature departureswhile also interfering with birds' migratory routes, vision, and breathing.Somecombination of both factors mayalso be the cause, but experts emphasize that nothing has beenprovensofar. “There’s more questions than answers still,” says Jon Hayes, executive director of .

Scientists firstbegan reportingavian deaths throughout New Mexico in August. Initially they didn’t think anything particularly unusual was going on: Birds expend a massive amount of energy flying hundreds or thousands of miles while also dodging deadly threats like bad weather, predators, and buildings.“The tragic but true fact of migrations is that birds die,” Hayes says. “Migration is very tough.”

But as reports of bird deathsbecame more widespread and continued into September,researchers started to become alarmed. More and more photosshowing deadand weakbirdson the ground were posted to aregional listserv,and observationsof abnormal behavior, atypical flight patterns, and stray or vagrantbirds across the Southwest further supported some sort of mass catastrophe.

With the situation growingmore dire, the NMSU scientists sprang into action.Desmond quickly convened wildlife experts from the university, the Bureau of Land Management, and, where a large number of birds were found dead on August 20.Since then,thecollaborative research team hasalready begunasweeping study of as many migratory birds as they can collect, living or dead, to understandwhat might have happened. Along with examining bird carcasses—more than 300 so far—researchers are catching and banding migrants passing through.

Thefirst possible causethe researchersconsidered was recent unseasonal weatherin the Southwest, which brought temperatures in the 30s and 40s, high winds, and snow to parts of the region. “A lot of birds probably died with the weather event that happened a week ago,” Desmond says. It’s also possible the cold spellforced birds to depart on their migration earlier than anticipated, shesays. But the storms abated last weekand birds continue to die. “It’s also very troubling that all of this started well before the [cold] weather, and it’s still continuing after the weather.”

The ongoing wildfires inCalifornia, Oregon, and Washington could also be playing a role.Wildfires are knownto force early migration movements from bird species,and the smokecan poison the air while decreasing visibility.“The wildfire smoke is significant . . . You couldn’t see across the street,” Hayes says, regarding air quality conditions from his home in Placitas, New Mexico. “There’s no doubt in my mind that’s going to affect birds, too.”

Hayes sees a connection between these different extreme weather events. “This is about abrupt changes in our weather patterns as a result of APP change,” he says. “All these things are going to cause long-term declines, long-term losses [of birds], and they’re gonna be punctuated by big scary events like this. It’s part of this bigger problem.”

A 2019studyled by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology found that North America is currently home to 3 billion fewer birds than it was 50 years ago due to multifold changes to habitat and food sources. Also last year, scientists with the APP used 140 million bird sightings to project in the coming century. They found that 389 bird species, including some killed in the current die-off, are threatened with extinction as temperatures and rainfall patterns shift. Many are also at risk from weather events like wildfires made more extreme by the warming APP.


So far, the most detailed information about the bird die-off has come from New Mexico, butafter NMSU staff built a , numerous reports of related migrant bird deaths have now come from five states in the southwestern United States and four states in Mexico.

After their initial investigation, the researchers planto send the hundreds of avian carcasses they've collectedto the in Ashland, Oregon, which could potentially provide more key information through necropsy reports. Theresults could take week or more, and even then, clear answers mayremainelusive. “Until we really get these birds out to autopsy, we won’t know,” she says. “It’s possible the autopsies won’t even tell us what went on.”

In the meantime, researchers are encouraging birders in the Southwestto be on the lookout fordisoriented or dead birds, and to report any observations and photos toiNaturalist or state fish and game departments. The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service is also collecting carcasses of birds affected, andinstructions forsending them can befound .