Dr. Peter Marra, Head of Smithsonian’s Migratory Bird Center (SMBC) and 
founder of Neighborhood Nestwatch in 2000, will be in Denver on October 21. He 
is the second of three speakers in the Bird Conservancy of the 
Rockies—Denver Museum of Nature & Science Speaker Series.

 

The SMBC is the only scientific institution solely dedicated to studying 
migratory birds. SMBC scientists study birds’ basic biology and what drives 
population size. Research focuses on seasonal interactions throughout 
birds’ full annual cycle, land management, conservation, and behavior. This 
approach is similar to Bird Conservancy’s mission of conserving birds and 
their habitats, wherever those habitats are. This means researchers migrate 
with the birds to their wintering grounds to study survivability there. 

 

The *American Redstart* is one of our beautiful wood-warblers, one we see, 
albeit infrequently, in Colorado. Male redstarts push females out of 
high-quality mangrove habitats in winter and into less successful scrub 
habitat. *Is this fair?* No, but in winter, redstart males aren’t very 
chivalrous. *Is it smart? *Well, it depends. It’s better for the individual 
but not so good for the species. *Have you seen this elsewhere?* Yes, and 
we recognize that lecturing rarely works, whether it is to the redstart or 
to the teenager. What works is increasing habitat, which isn’t easy for us, 
or adaptation by the birds, which isn’t easy for the birds.

 

*Some do adapt, however. How do they do it? *Although many bird populations 
are suffering serious declines, some birds, however, and not just crows, 
are adapting to less native land and more urban land. SMBC is studying what 
adaptations are most promising. Through Neighborhood Nestwatch, birds are 
*color*-banded in backyard neighborhoods to assist homeowners in providing 
valuable citizen science into prosperity and survivability. 

 

SMBC examines how climate, habitat, food, pathogens, and other direct 
sources of mortality affect both individual migratory and resident birds. 
The center pursues innovative technological solutions for tracking animals 
throughout their lifetimes.

 

To learn more, come to the Denver Museum of Nature & Science at 7:00 p.m. 
on Wednesday, October 21. Get tickets beforehand at DMNS.org. Go to 
“Learn”, “Adult,” and “After Hours” for information and tickets.

 

Larry Modesitt

Chair, Board of Directors

Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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