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Common Grackles Conservation

Why common birds become less common
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Common Grackle
© Carrie Johnson

Despite their seeming abundance, the numbers of Common Grackles have shrunk by 60% in the last 40 years. Grackles prefer open landscapes with scattered trees, and their numbers peaked as eastern forests were cleared for agriculture in the 18th and 19th Centuries. As eastern forests grew back in the 20th Century, Common Grackle habitat shrank. A far more alarming cause is active persecution. Grackles gather in large roosts near humans, and because they are perceived as agricultural pests, they are routinely exterminated in large numbers. The destruction of night roosts also kills birds in addition to grackles, such as Rusty Blackbirds, whose population is in dangerous decline.

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BirdNote®

Common Grackles Have a Conservation Story, Too

Written by Bob Sundstrom

This is BirdNote.
[Common Grackle -- calls of individual and large flock at roost]
Few birds of eastern North America seem more conspicuous than Common Grackles. Yet even common birds have vital conservation stories to tell. [Common Grackle calls] Familiar in many backyards, Common Grackles are a type of blackbird. The males glint with purple or bronze iridescence.
Despite their seeming abundance, grackle numbers have shrunk by 60% in the last 40 years. Why the steep decline? One cause is a change in their habitat. Grackles prefer open landscapes with scattered trees. Their numbers peaked [begin bringing in flock of Grackles] as eastern forests were cleared for agriculture in the 18th and 19th Centuries. As eastern forests grew back in the 20th Century, Common Grackle habitat shrank. [Calls of Common Grackles]
A far more alarming cause is active persecution. Because grackles gather in large roosts near humans and because they?re perceived as agricultural pests, they are routinely exterminated in very large numbers ? sometimes by the millions. Communal night roosts are sprayed with a surfactant, a detergent-like substance that strips protective oils from birds? feathers. When the birds get wet, they die of hypothermia.
For the Common Grackle future wildlife management requires greater precision and foresight.
For BirdNote, I?m Michael Stein.
[Common Grackle -- calls of individual and large flock at roost]
                                            ###
The sounds of a flock of Common Grackles comes from Xeno Canto xc71558 Mike Nelson. Call of single Common Grackle provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York, 133330 recorded by G.A. Keller.
Suburban ambient recorded by C. Peterson.
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
© 2012 Tune In to Nature.org          March 2012          Narrator: Michael Stein

ID# SotB-COGR-01-2012-03-03 SotB-COGR-01

Bob Sundstrom
Writer
Michael Stein
Narrator
Carrie Johnson
Photographer
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TagsState of the Birds

Related Resources

More about Common Grackles at AllAboutBirdsLearn more about Common Grackle conservation at Audubon.org

More About These Birds

Rusty Blackbird (Euphagus carolinus)

Euphagus carolinus

Sights & Sounds

Birds connect us with the joy and wonder of nature. By telling vivid, sound-rich stories about birds and the challenges they face, BirdNote inspires listeners to care about the natural world – and take steps to protect it.

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