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What Flaco the Owl’s Death Teaches Us About Making Cities Safer for Birds

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Wednesday, April 17, 2024

On March 3, on what felt like the first lovely Sunday afternoon of the year, hundreds of humans gathered at an oak tree in New York City’s Central Park to remember an owl. They carried musical instruments, television cameras, speeches and verse. One speaker took the microphone and read the crowd a rewrite of Frank O’Hara’s piece “Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed!],” with adjusted lines to address the departed bird: “Oh Flaco we love you get up.” Many of the mourners had been expecting the grim news that brought them to the park for a long time. Flaco, the Eurasian eagle-owl who escaped from his Central Park Zoo enclosure at the southern end of the park and lived free in the city for more than a year, had died just over a week earlier, after apparently striking a residential building. Ornithologists and conservationists say his remarkable life as a voluntary New Yorker—and the tragic way it ended—should change the way humans think about the birds that live among us. Hatched in captivity in North Carolina and raised at New York City’s Central Park Zoo, Flaco chose his own location for the first time on February 2, 2023, after someone created a hole in his enclosure that allowed him to escape. The 12-year-old owl eluded the humans who tried to recapture him and quickly began to behave as his wild counterparts in Europe and Asia do, hunting, hooting and swooping through the city. Zoo officials eventually suspended their efforts to bring him back to his cage and announced that they would monitor him instead. Many human New Yorkers delighted in their non-native avian neighbor: His success as a newly wild bird was proof, perhaps, that theirs was a city where anything could happen. Flaco’s former enclosure at the Central Park Zoo has remained empty for the past year. Lauren Oster Even as a year passed and the owl’s admirers celebrated his “Flaco-versary” of freedom, experts were cleareyed about the dangers he continued to face in the city before he died. “He’s not in the wild, born to natural parents, living in his natural habitat; that’s the only good situation for him, and it’s never going to happen,” said Christopher D. Soucy, executive director of the Raptor Trust, a New Jersey wildlife rehabilitation center that admitted 89 owls in 2023. “He’s most assuredly going to live a far shorter life than if he stayed in captivity,” noted Karla Bloem, executive director of the International Owl Center in Minnesota. One particular hazard came up in every conversation: “There’s a war on rats in New York City, and they don’t do it all with traps,” said Kevin McGowan, an associate at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “There’s always a chance that he’ll pick one up somewhere that’s loaded with poison, and we know that secondary poisoning does kill raptors.” The tragedy they had foreseen struck on February 23, when a building supervisor found Flaco lying in a residential courtyard on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. His improbable year had ended with his death. When veterinary pathologists performed an initial necropsy on Flaco, their findings were “consistent with death due to acute traumatic injury.” The Wildlife Conservation Society, the zoo’s parent nonprofit, noted that “Flaco’s tragic and untimely death highlights the issue of bird strikes and their devastating effects on wild bird populations.” Flaco favored high perches such as scaffolding and water towers as he explored Manhattan’s Upper West Side. David Lei That issue is especially deserving of local attention, as New York City is notorious for bird fatalities. Millions of migrating birds navigate among its disorienting skyscrapers in the spring and fall as they follow the Atlantic Flyway, and each year an estimated 90,000 to 230,000 die trying. To reduce that number, humans have to mitigate the twin hazards of reflective glass windows and artificial lighting. Glass is invisible to birds, which perceive images reflected in it as food, shelter, open air and even other birds. Humans can make it visible to them with barriers in front of it or markings on its surface. Artificial lighting, in turn, attracts and disorients birds that are accustomed to navigating after dark with natural cues such as moonlight and starlight—and can precipitate fatal crashes into buildings and other obstacles. In the wake of the zoo’s report and an uptick in public attention to avian welfare, New York lawmakers renewed local pushes to pass legislation for birds’ sake. Senate Bill S7098A, which was renamed “the Flaco Act” after the owl’s death, would require some state-owned buildings to incorporate practices to reduce bird death. Senate Bill S7663, the Dark Skies Protection Act, would require that non-essential outdoor lighting be shielded, motion-activated or turned off between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. That said, researchers have found that between 365 million and 988 million birds die hitting buildings across the United States each year, and fewer than 1 percent of those fatalities involve high-rises. Products and practices to reduce strikes at low-rises (roughly 56 percent of deaths) and residences (roughly 44 percent) are as just as crucial to conserving birds. Bloem notes that common equipment and barriers can also be lethal obstacles for owls and other birds. She says hockey and soccer nets, for example, should be taken down when not in active use, as owls that fly into and become entangled in them can incur life-threatening injuries as they struggle to escape. Barbed wire is a particularly grisly hazard: “Owls fly into barbed wire fences and they get impaled,” she explains. “They thrash around, they rip the muscle off their bones, [and] it’s hideous, absolutely hideous.” Adhesive pest control like glue boards intended to catch rodents and tape for lanternflies, in turn, is woefully indiscriminate. “All kinds of things get stuck on them,” Bloem says. “Anything sticky outside: bad.” Flaco spent the majority of his first months of freedom exploring Central Park. At least 11 species of owls had been spotted there prior to his escape from the zoo. David Lei American lawmakers are taking steps to prohibit that form of pest control, as their counterparts have already done in England, Iceland, Ireland and New Zealand. This January, Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, introduced a bill to ban the possession and use of glue traps nationwide. Bloem’s colleague Marjon Savelsberg, a Dutch researcher who studies wild eagle-owls’ vocalizations in the quarry near her home in Maastricht, likens Flaco’s experience in Manhattan to that of the local members of his species she hears and sees on a regular basis. The rats, pigeons and crows attracted to litter in and around Maastricht’s city park create an area of high prey density that she says is like McDonald’s for eagle-owls. “They hunt in town, and we know they do because they’ve been fitted with transmitters—but I also know it because people [in town] send me recorded sound files,” she says. “Because I know the individuals, I can tell, ‘Oh, that’s Female No. 1 calling for food.’” She also likens Flaco’s fate to the owls’ deaths near her home. “The last year of his life, Flaco lived the life of his wild family over here—and, sad to say, also died the way a lot of his family members here die,” she says. “We are their biggest threat: rodenticides, pesticides, PCBs, building collisions, barbed wire entanglements, habitat loss, bird flu … you name it.” After further study of his tissues and organs, several of those threats were found to have affected Flaco. When Wildlife Conservation Society updated its initial necropsy findings after weeks of additional analyses, the new details painted an even more devastating picture of the city’s effect on Flaco. Post-mortem testing revealed that he had a severe case of pigeon herpesvirus, a disease he contracted from eating feral pigeons, and four different anticoagulant rodenticides in his system. Both the disease and the rat poisons “would have been debilitating and ultimately fatal,” and experts say they likely weakened and disoriented him, causing him to topple from his perch high in the air and sustain traumatic injury on impact with the ground rather than with the building. Testing also revealed trace amounts of DDE, a breakdown product of DDT, an insecticide banned in the United States in 1972. Though the level in Flaco’s body was clinically insignificant, it was a grim reminder of the agricultural chemical’s long shadow. “It is a general truth that being compromised by a toxin like rodenticide or DDE makes an animal more susceptible to an opportunistic disease, whether bacterial, viral or parasitic,” says Rita McMahon, the director of the Wild Bird Fund, the Manhattan wildlife rehabilitation center that initially retrieved Flaco’s body. The organization brought him to its hospital a few blocks away, where veterinary staff pronounced him dead. Research has demonstrated rodenticides’ deadly effect on wild animals’ immune systems in California, where scientists found that bobcats exposed to multiple types of anticoagulant rat poison were more than seven times more likely to die of mange, a skin parasite that was previously rarely fatal to them, than of any other cause. Street art celebrating Flaco on Manhattan’s Lower East Side appeared after he visited the neighborhood in November 2023. Lauren Oster Wildlife rehabilitators and other experts say bacterial and viral diseases that affect pigeons—and can spread quickly in dense urban populations—also threatened Flaco. “From our very recent readings on the subject of pigeon herpesvirus, apparently the Eurasian eagle-owl is particularly susceptible to the virus,” McMahon says. “We sure make living rough for wildlife.” Anticoagulant rodenticides, like those detected in Flaco, interfere with the activation of vitamin K, which produces blood-clotting factors in the liver. In animals without those factors, bruising, bleeding into body cavities and hemorrhaging can culminate in shock and death. It can take up to ten days for a rat that has ingested lethal levels of anticoagulant rodenticide to die from internal bleeding, and the toxins can stay in their bodies for up to 100 days. A predator consuming that rat, then, experiences the rodenticide’s effects on its own system. No matter how sheltered a source of poison might seem, its deadly impact can travel far and wide. New York City’s best-known birds have demonstrated rodenticide’s devastating effects on their species time and time again. Pale Male, the city’s most celebrated red-tailed hawk, lost his mate to rodenticide poisoning in 2012; when he mated again later that year, rodenticide sickened two of his chicks and is thought to have killed another. In 2022, a paper in Ecotoxicology reported that 68 percent of red-tailed hawks in New York State have anticoagulant rodenticide toxins in their systems. Barry, a barred owl who captured New Yorkers’ hearts in 2021, had two anticoagulant rodenticides (bromadiolone and difethialone) in her system when she was struck and killed by a vehicle in Central Park. She was at risk for a fatal hemorrhage long before that blunt-force trauma occurred. “What [many pest-control companies do is use] four or five different poisons, not just one, and if you’re adding a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner, you’re going to end up with water for blood, which is exactly what happens to these animals,” says Lisa Owens Viani, director of Raptors Are the Solution, a California-based nonprofit focused on eliminating toxic rodenticides from the food web. In Flaco’s case, the rodenticides in his system could have turned a nonlethal injury into a fatal one. “This happened to an owl in San Luis Obispo a couple years ago; she had a small wound that ended up bleeding out. When they necropsy these animals, the body cavity is often just filled with blood. The photos are very hard to look at,” Viani says. Furthermore, “If you’re flying around with thinned-out blood, you’re anemic, you’re weak, you’re not going to be able to dodge the normal kinds of things you would have to dodge.” Eagle-owl researchers in Europe speculate that Flaco used Manhattan’s massive buildings to amplify the sound of his hoots. David Lei Citizens and conservation groups are pushing lawmakers to curb rodenticides. New Yorkers took a stand on birds’ behalf in 2014, when six nonprofits filed a petition with the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation to regulate the use of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). It was denied that fall, a move that the pest-control industry celebrated by commending colleagues who had lobbied against the bill in Albany. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stopped licensing SGARs for sale to general consumers nationwide in 2015. That said, retail customers in many parts of the country can still buy the first-generation poisons, which act more slowly but are just as harmful. Furthermore, pest-control professionals can still use SGARs in all U.S. states except California, where loopholes exist for industrial uses. Already-purchased products or those that weren’t removed from store shelves are also still deployed. “People are still somehow using them,” veterinarian Cynthia Hopf-Dennis, the lead researcher on the Ecotoxicology study on rodenticide in red-tailed hawks, told the Cornell Chronicle. On the legislative level, Viani and her fellow conservationists in California were able to push for the passage of rodenticide-regulation bills such as 2020’s California Ecosystems Protection Act (AB 1788) and 2023’s AB 1322. They filed lawsuits to force the state to investigate the wide-ranging impacts and cumulative effects of those poisons and presented groundbreaking research—such as the aforementioned study on bobcats—and stated that moratoriums shouldn’t wait. Agencies for environmental regulation vary from state to state, but that grassroots effort in California demonstrated that local groups working together could have a far-reaching impact, says Viani. On an individual level, experts say concerned citizens can take immediate action to reduce threats to birds living in their communities. Raptors Are the Solution offers downloadable outreach materials and an Activist Toolkit with step-by-step instructions for reducing rat poison use and introducing safer integrated pest-control strategies and long-term solutions to infestations. These four Eurasian eagle-owl chicks have been borrowed from their nest for leg banding, which will allow Belgian ornithologists to track the health of their population over time. Didier Vangeluwe Didier Vangeluwe, the head of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences’ bird banding center and an ornithologist who has studied eagle-owls for 40 years, emphasizes the importance of lobbying local authorities to expand cities’ green areas and improve their plant diversity and water quality. He also stresses that managing the balance and health of nonhuman species is our responsibility, whether we acknowledge it or not. “We are in the center of the game, and our influence is going in every direction,” he says. Raptor Trust director Soucy concurs that we should make human habitations safer for wild animals, and that we should be doing it now. “Millions and millions and millions of years of evolution didn’t really design these animals to live in urban environments,” he says. “Some of them don’t have a choice anymore, because we’ve messed up so much of their natural environments; they’ve moved in not necessarily by choice but out of necessity. We have to do our best to understand that we’re sharing the world with them.” Get the latest Science stories in your inbox.

Ornithologists and conservationists say humans can take key steps to make urban environments less hazardous for our avian friends

On March 3, on what felt like the first lovely Sunday afternoon of the year, hundreds of humans gathered at an oak tree in New York City’s Central Park to remember an owl. They carried musical instruments, television cameras, speeches and verse. One speaker took the microphone and read the crowd a rewrite of Frank O’Hara’s piece “Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed!],” with adjusted lines to address the departed bird: “Oh Flaco we love you get up.” Many of the mourners had been expecting the grim news that brought them to the park for a long time.

Flaco, the Eurasian eagle-owl who escaped from his Central Park Zoo enclosure at the southern end of the park and lived free in the city for more than a year, had died just over a week earlier, after apparently striking a residential building. Ornithologists and conservationists say his remarkable life as a voluntary New Yorker—and the tragic way it ended—should change the way humans think about the birds that live among us.

Hatched in captivity in North Carolina and raised at New York City’s Central Park Zoo, Flaco chose his own location for the first time on February 2, 2023, after someone created a hole in his enclosure that allowed him to escape. The 12-year-old owl eluded the humans who tried to recapture him and quickly began to behave as his wild counterparts in Europe and Asia do, hunting, hooting and swooping through the city. Zoo officials eventually suspended their efforts to bring him back to his cage and announced that they would monitor him instead. Many human New Yorkers delighted in their non-native avian neighbor: His success as a newly wild bird was proof, perhaps, that theirs was a city where anything could happen.

Flaco's Enclosure at Central Park Zoo
Flaco’s former enclosure at the Central Park Zoo has remained empty for the past year. Lauren Oster

Even as a year passed and the owl’s admirers celebrated his “Flaco-versary” of freedom, experts were cleareyed about the dangers he continued to face in the city before he died.

“He’s not in the wild, born to natural parents, living in his natural habitat; that’s the only good situation for him, and it’s never going to happen,” said Christopher D. Soucy, executive director of the Raptor Trust, a New Jersey wildlife rehabilitation center that admitted 89 owls in 2023.

“He’s most assuredly going to live a far shorter life than if he stayed in captivity,” noted Karla Bloem, executive director of the International Owl Center in Minnesota.

One particular hazard came up in every conversation: “There’s a war on rats in New York City, and they don’t do it all with traps,” said Kevin McGowan, an associate at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “There’s always a chance that he’ll pick one up somewhere that’s loaded with poison, and we know that secondary poisoning does kill raptors.”

The tragedy they had foreseen struck on February 23, when a building supervisor found Flaco lying in a residential courtyard on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. His improbable year had ended with his death.

When veterinary pathologists performed an initial necropsy on Flaco, their findings were “consistent with death due to acute traumatic injury.” The Wildlife Conservation Society, the zoo’s parent nonprofit, noted that “Flaco’s tragic and untimely death highlights the issue of bird strikes and their devastating effects on wild bird populations.”

Flaco the Owl Perches Near Building
Flaco favored high perches such as scaffolding and water towers as he explored Manhattan’s Upper West Side. David Lei

That issue is especially deserving of local attention, as New York City is notorious for bird fatalities. Millions of migrating birds navigate among its disorienting skyscrapers in the spring and fall as they follow the Atlantic Flyway, and each year an estimated 90,000 to 230,000 die trying. To reduce that number, humans have to mitigate the twin hazards of reflective glass windows and artificial lighting. Glass is invisible to birds, which perceive images reflected in it as food, shelter, open air and even other birds. Humans can make it visible to them with barriers in front of it or markings on its surface. Artificial lighting, in turn, attracts and disorients birds that are accustomed to navigating after dark with natural cues such as moonlight and starlight—and can precipitate fatal crashes into buildings and other obstacles.

In the wake of the zoo’s report and an uptick in public attention to avian welfare, New York lawmakers renewed local pushes to pass legislation for birds’ sake. Senate Bill S7098A, which was renamed “the Flaco Act” after the owl’s death, would require some state-owned buildings to incorporate practices to reduce bird death. Senate Bill S7663, the Dark Skies Protection Act, would require that non-essential outdoor lighting be shielded, motion-activated or turned off between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. That said, researchers have found that between 365 million and 988 million birds die hitting buildings across the United States each year, and fewer than 1 percent of those fatalities involve high-rises. Products and practices to reduce strikes at low-rises (roughly 56 percent of deaths) and residences (roughly 44 percent) are as just as crucial to conserving birds.

Bloem notes that common equipment and barriers can also be lethal obstacles for owls and other birds. She says hockey and soccer nets, for example, should be taken down when not in active use, as owls that fly into and become entangled in them can incur life-threatening injuries as they struggle to escape. Barbed wire is a particularly grisly hazard: “Owls fly into barbed wire fences and they get impaled,” she explains. “They thrash around, they rip the muscle off their bones, [and] it’s hideous, absolutely hideous.” Adhesive pest control like glue boards intended to catch rodents and tape for lanternflies, in turn, is woefully indiscriminate. “All kinds of things get stuck on them,” Bloem says. “Anything sticky outside: bad.”

Flaco in a Tree
Flaco spent the majority of his first months of freedom exploring Central Park. At least 11 species of owls had been spotted there prior to his escape from the zoo. David Lei

American lawmakers are taking steps to prohibit that form of pest control, as their counterparts have already done in England, Iceland, Ireland and New Zealand. This January, Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, introduced a bill to ban the possession and use of glue traps nationwide.

Bloem’s colleague Marjon Savelsberg, a Dutch researcher who studies wild eagle-owls’ vocalizations in the quarry near her home in Maastricht, likens Flaco’s experience in Manhattan to that of the local members of his species she hears and sees on a regular basis. The rats, pigeons and crows attracted to litter in and around Maastricht’s city park create an area of high prey density that she says is like McDonald’s for eagle-owls. “They hunt in town, and we know they do because they’ve been fitted with transmitters—but I also know it because people [in town] send me recorded sound files,” she says. “Because I know the individuals, I can tell, ‘Oh, that’s Female No. 1 calling for food.’”

She also likens Flaco’s fate to the owls’ deaths near her home. “The last year of his life, Flaco lived the life of his wild family over here—and, sad to say, also died the way a lot of his family members here die,” she says. “We are their biggest threat: rodenticides, pesticides, PCBs, building collisions, barbed wire entanglements, habitat loss, bird flu … you name it.”

After further study of his tissues and organs, several of those threats were found to have affected Flaco. When Wildlife Conservation Society updated its initial necropsy findings after weeks of additional analyses, the new details painted an even more devastating picture of the city’s effect on Flaco. Post-mortem testing revealed that he had a severe case of pigeon herpesvirus, a disease he contracted from eating feral pigeons, and four different anticoagulant rodenticides in his system. Both the disease and the rat poisons “would have been debilitating and ultimately fatal,” and experts say they likely weakened and disoriented him, causing him to topple from his perch high in the air and sustain traumatic injury on impact with the ground rather than with the building. Testing also revealed trace amounts of DDE, a breakdown product of DDT, an insecticide banned in the United States in 1972. Though the level in Flaco’s body was clinically insignificant, it was a grim reminder of the agricultural chemical’s long shadow.

“It is a general truth that being compromised by a toxin like rodenticide or DDE makes an animal more susceptible to an opportunistic disease, whether bacterial, viral or parasitic,” says Rita McMahon, the director of the Wild Bird Fund, the Manhattan wildlife rehabilitation center that initially retrieved Flaco’s body. The organization brought him to its hospital a few blocks away, where veterinary staff pronounced him dead. Research has demonstrated rodenticides’ deadly effect on wild animals’ immune systems in California, where scientists found that bobcats exposed to multiple types of anticoagulant rat poison were more than seven times more likely to die of mange, a skin parasite that was previously rarely fatal to them, than of any other cause.

Flaco Graffiti
Street art celebrating Flaco on Manhattan’s Lower East Side appeared after he visited the neighborhood in November 2023. Lauren Oster

Wildlife rehabilitators and other experts say bacterial and viral diseases that affect pigeons—and can spread quickly in dense urban populations—also threatened Flaco. “From our very recent readings on the subject of pigeon herpesvirus, apparently the Eurasian eagle-owl is particularly susceptible to the virus,” McMahon says. “We sure make living rough for wildlife.”

Anticoagulant rodenticides, like those detected in Flaco, interfere with the activation of vitamin K, which produces blood-clotting factors in the liver. In animals without those factors, bruising, bleeding into body cavities and hemorrhaging can culminate in shock and death. It can take up to ten days for a rat that has ingested lethal levels of anticoagulant rodenticide to die from internal bleeding, and the toxins can stay in their bodies for up to 100 days. A predator consuming that rat, then, experiences the rodenticide’s effects on its own system. No matter how sheltered a source of poison might seem, its deadly impact can travel far and wide.

New York City’s best-known birds have demonstrated rodenticide’s devastating effects on their species time and time again. Pale Male, the city’s most celebrated red-tailed hawk, lost his mate to rodenticide poisoning in 2012; when he mated again later that year, rodenticide sickened two of his chicks and is thought to have killed another. In 2022, a paper in Ecotoxicology reported that 68 percent of red-tailed hawks in New York State have anticoagulant rodenticide toxins in their systems. Barry, a barred owl who captured New Yorkers’ hearts in 2021, had two anticoagulant rodenticides (bromadiolone and difethialone) in her system when she was struck and killed by a vehicle in Central Park. She was at risk for a fatal hemorrhage long before that blunt-force trauma occurred.

“What [many pest-control companies do is use] four or five different poisons, not just one, and if you’re adding a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner, you’re going to end up with water for blood, which is exactly what happens to these animals,” says Lisa Owens Viani, director of Raptors Are the Solution, a California-based nonprofit focused on eliminating toxic rodenticides from the food web. In Flaco’s case, the rodenticides in his system could have turned a nonlethal injury into a fatal one. “This happened to an owl in San Luis Obispo a couple years ago; she had a small wound that ended up bleeding out. When they necropsy these animals, the body cavity is often just filled with blood. The photos are very hard to look at,” Viani says. Furthermore, “If you’re flying around with thinned-out blood, you’re anemic, you’re weak, you’re not going to be able to dodge the normal kinds of things you would have to dodge.”

Flaco Perches on a Building
Eagle-owl researchers in Europe speculate that Flaco used Manhattan’s massive buildings to amplify the sound of his hoots. David Lei

Citizens and conservation groups are pushing lawmakers to curb rodenticides. New Yorkers took a stand on birds’ behalf in 2014, when six nonprofits filed a petition with the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation to regulate the use of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). It was denied that fall, a move that the pest-control industry celebrated by commending colleagues who had lobbied against the bill in Albany.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stopped licensing SGARs for sale to general consumers nationwide in 2015. That said, retail customers in many parts of the country can still buy the first-generation poisons, which act more slowly but are just as harmful. Furthermore, pest-control professionals can still use SGARs in all U.S. states except California, where loopholes exist for industrial uses. Already-purchased products or those that weren’t removed from store shelves are also still deployed. “People are still somehow using them,” veterinarian Cynthia Hopf-Dennis, the lead researcher on the Ecotoxicology study on rodenticide in red-tailed hawks, told the Cornell Chronicle.

On the legislative level, Viani and her fellow conservationists in California were able to push for the passage of rodenticide-regulation bills such as 2020’s California Ecosystems Protection Act (AB 1788) and 2023’s AB 1322. They filed lawsuits to force the state to investigate the wide-ranging impacts and cumulative effects of those poisons and presented groundbreaking research—such as the aforementioned study on bobcats—and stated that moratoriums shouldn’t wait. Agencies for environmental regulation vary from state to state, but that grassroots effort in California demonstrated that local groups working together could have a far-reaching impact, says Viani.

On an individual level, experts say concerned citizens can take immediate action to reduce threats to birds living in their communities. Raptors Are the Solution offers downloadable outreach materials and an Activist Toolkit with step-by-step instructions for reducing rat poison use and introducing safer integrated pest-control strategies and long-term solutions to infestations.

Eurasian Eagle-Owl Chicks
These four Eurasian eagle-owl chicks have been borrowed from their nest for leg banding, which will allow Belgian ornithologists to track the health of their population over time. Didier Vangeluwe

Didier Vangeluwe, the head of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences’ bird banding center and an ornithologist who has studied eagle-owls for 40 years, emphasizes the importance of lobbying local authorities to expand cities’ green areas and improve their plant diversity and water quality. He also stresses that managing the balance and health of nonhuman species is our responsibility, whether we acknowledge it or not. “We are in the center of the game, and our influence is going in every direction,” he says.

Raptor Trust director Soucy concurs that we should make human habitations safer for wild animals, and that we should be doing it now. “Millions and millions and millions of years of evolution didn’t really design these animals to live in urban environments,” he says. “Some of them don’t have a choice anymore, because we’ve messed up so much of their natural environments; they’ve moved in not necessarily by choice but out of necessity. We have to do our best to understand that we’re sharing the world with them.”

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Banksy Unveils Two New Murals of Children Gazing Up at the Sky Days Before Christmas

Some onlookers are interpreting the identical artworks, which appeared on the streets of London, as a commentary on homelessness in the city

Banksy Unveils Two New Murals of Children Gazing Up at the Sky Days Before Christmas Some onlookers are interpreting the identical artworks, which appeared on the streets of London, as a commentary on homelessness in the city The new Banksy artwork near the Centre Point tower in London MEGA / GC Images via Getty Images Ahead of the holidays, Banksy has unveiled a new mural in London. The black-and-white image depicts two children in winter coats and hats, lying on their backs and gazing upward. The anonymous street artist posted a photo of the mural on his official Instagram account on December 22. The same image appeared in two locations: above a row of garages on Queen’s Mews in western London and outside the Centre Point tower in central London. Banksy only posted the Queen’s Mews mural online, but both have been attributed to him, per BBC News’ Aurelia Foster and Nicky Ford. The other new Banksy mural, located above a row of garages in western London Leon Neal / Getty Images The artist doesn’t typically offer information about the intent behind his works, but the new murals were “interpreted by some observers in the street art world as a statement on rising child homelessness in Britain,” per the New York Times’ Ephrat Livni. One of those observers is Daniel Lloyd-Morgan, an artist and Banksy fan. “Everybody is having a good time, but there are a lot of children who are not having a good time at Christmas,” he tells BBC News. Quick fact: Banksy’s Christmas murals In December 2019, the street artist unveiled a reindeer mural in Birmingham, England, that also appeared to comment on homelessness. Lloyd-Morgan thinks Banksy chose to paint the mural at Centre Point for a reason. The tower was built as an office building in 1966, but it sat empty for most of the following decade. In 1969, Reverend Ken Leech opened a shelter for homeless youths in a nearby church. Frustrated by the empty building towering over his neighborhood, Leech named his charity Centrepoint. In 1974, nearly 100 people occupied the empty Centre Point tower to protest rising homelessness in London, according to Hyperallergic’s Rhea Nayyar. Today, the tower is home to luxury apartments, offices and stores. According to government data released in October, about 170,000 children are currently unhoused in Britain—up from 70,000 in 2010. People walking by the mural were “ignoring it,” Lloyd-Morgan tells BBC News. “It’s a busy area. Quite poignant that people aren’t stopping. They walk past homeless people and they don’t see them lying on the street.” Banksy is known for his street art that doubles as social commentary. Many of his artworks, including a series of murals in Ukraine, feature anti-war themes. Some of his pieces have been interpreted as reflections on environmental conservation, domestic violence and refugees. In the new murals, one of the children is pointing skyward. “It’s kind of like they’re stargazing,” Lloyd-Morgan tells BBC News. Some onlookers think the artworks are commenting on children’s imaginations. As Artnet’s Jo Lawson-Tancred writes, “The classic Oscar Wilde line, ‘We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars,’ comes to mind.” Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.

‘Unashamedly capitalist’ rewilders claim ‘Moneyball’ approach could make millions - but experts sceptical

Rich Stockdale says model of ‘regenerative capitalism’ would maximise profits by planting trees, restoring peatlands, and installing windfarms across its estatesThe founder of an investment firm buying large estates across Britain to restore woods and peatland has said it is “unashamedly and proudly” capitalist, and plans to make tens of millions of pounds in profit.Rich Stockdale, the chief executive of Oxygen Conservation, said his model of “regenerative capitalism” was a “force for good” because it would offer investors significant profits by planting trees, restoring peatlands, operating solar farms and holiday homes and installing new windfarms across its estates. Continue reading...

The founder of an investment firm buying large estates across Britain to restore woods and peatland has said it is “unashamedly and proudly” capitalist, and plans to make tens of millions of pounds in profit.Rich Stockdale, the chief executive of Oxygen Conservation, said his model of “regenerative capitalism” was a “force for good” because it would offer investors significant profits by planting trees, restoring peatlands, operating solar farms and holiday homes and installing new windfarms across its estates.The Exeter-based firm, which has bought 13 estates in under four years, plans to rapidly become the UK’s largest private landowner by expanding its current landholding of 50,000 acres (20,234 hectares) over the next five years to 250,000 acres.“We are applying a capitalist model, unashamedly and proudly,” Stockdale said, on a tour of Oxygen’s estate at Dorback near Grantown-on-Spey in the Cairngorms.“We think releasing, activating and motivating more capital into this space is the only way we can scale conservation for the better of climate, wildlife, people and everyone concerned.”He said Oxygen Conservation was creating a new market for “premium” carbon credits because some wealthy private and institutional investors would pay much higher prices to store carbon in new woodlands or peatland if they included high environmental and social benefit.Rich Stockdale, who runs Oxygen Conservation Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The GuardianIts goal is to sell two million tonnes of carbon credits at well above the normal market rate, to prove that “regenerative capitalism” can work, he added.Stockdale likened his firm’s approach to the Brad Pitt movie Moneyball, in which a baseball coach used performance data to build a winning team. Oxygen Conservation uses Lidar laser scanning, thermal imaging to track deer and photogrammetry to build up 3D images of their estates.“We’ve taken very much a moneyball approach to the environment that’s previously been applied to sport. And that’s where you see all these threads that run through data, sport, high performance, US tech culture. We’ve brought that to the environmental world.”Campaigners and experts in natural capital who have been closely watching Oxygen Conservation’s rapid growth are sceptical about its methodology. They say it is based on significant levels of borrowing and speculative bets on the future value of its investments.Residents near Comrie in the Scottish Highlands, where Oxygen Conservation plans to build a large new 50MW windfarm, and around Dartmoor in south-west England where it bought a large hill farm, have accused the firm of ignoring local concerns and opposition.Josh Doble, the policy director at Community Land Scotland, a community-ownership advisory and campaign group, said Oxygen Conservation was the most bullish of a new generation of “mega lairds” accumulating extensive land-holdings.Their profit-driven approach “raised questions about the long-term commitment to restoring nature, rather than treating land as another investible commodity,” Doble said.“If absentee investor landowners own large parts of rural Britain, they must engage with the fact that owning land comes with responsibility. If you have a risky model, you need to be very careful because you’re not just making risky decisions in a boardroom, you’re playing with people’s lives.”Despite insisting Oxygen Conservation would be transparent about its plans and its business model, Stockdale refused to confirm or deny reports from natural capital experts he had already spent £150m and planned to spend another £100m on land.He said he could not say how much he paid the brewing firm BrewDog this summer for its estate at Kinrara near Kingussie or for Dorback because their owners had requested confidentiality.The Kinrara Estate which Oxygen Conservation. bought from BrewDog. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The GuardianCampaigners said withholding the sale price for a Highland estate is unusual, undermined transparency and risked concealing changes in the land market.Its biggest investors include Mike Dixon, a billionaire statistician who holds most of its shares, the self-styled ethical bank Triodos and Tony Bloom, a gambling billionaire who owns Brighton and Hove Albion FC. Bloom is currently being sued in a lawsuit alleging his gambling syndicate used “frontmen” to place bets. It is understood Bloom intends to file a defence to the claim.The latest accounts for its parent company, Oxygen House Group, which is also the majority shareholder in Low Carbon, the firm building its two Scottish windfarms, show the firm has two large bank loans totalling £106m to be repaid by 2033.Its critics point out that the two Scottish estates where it wants to build new 50MW windfarms, at Invergeldie near Loch Lomond and Trossachs national park, and at Blackburn and Hartsgarth estate near Langholm in the Borders, had bank loans worth £20.5m tied to them.Andrew Thompson, who helps run a local group opposing the windfarm, said residents feared those loans meant Oxygen Conservation had to push the windfarm through to pay off that debt, despite well-founded objections to the project from the conservation agency NatureScot and the national park authority. “Otherwise they’re completely screwed,” he said.A stream on the Kinrara Estate bought by Oxygen Conservation. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The GuardianStockdale claimed Oxygen’s investments are already worth more than £300m, and said its backers could see returns as high as 15% a year because the price of its carbon credits would climb to up to £180 a tonne and its biodiversity net gain credits were already worth £25,000 each.The average price for carbon in the UK last year was £37 a tonne. He said the appetite for premium credits had been proven when Burges Salmon, the law firm which acts for Oxygen Conservation, paid £125 a tonne earlier this year. The civil engineering firm Arup also paid £100 a tonne to a nature capital firm called Nattergal which owns rewilding estates in eastern England this year.He said one way to pay its investors was to sell off its estates after five years or so at a significant profit, with Oxygen Conservation remaining in charge of running the estate.He said wealthy investors including pension funds and international companies were willing to pay well above market rates for these credits, similar to some drivers preferring a Prius over a Ford. European investors were clamouring for Oxygen Conservation to invest on the continent.“We’re taking more risk, we’re pushing this out, we are doing things faster and different. I’ve been able to do that because of an incredible set of investors, an incredible team. Please don’t judge us by the norm, we aren’t trying to be,” Stockdale said.

2025 is ‘year of the octopus’ as record numbers spotted off England’s south coast

Milder weather led to a bloom in the invertebrates in south Cornwall and Devon, wildlife charity saysRecord numbers of sightings of one of the world’s most intelligent invertebrates over the summer have led the Wildlife Trusts to declare 2025 “the year of the octopus” in its annual review of Britain’s seas.A mild winter followed by an exceptionally warm spring prompted unprecedented numbers of Mediterranean octopuses to take up residence along England’s south coast, from Penzance in Cornwall to south Devon. Continue reading...

Record numbers of sightings of one of the world’s most intelligent invertebrates over the summer have led the Wildlife Trusts to declare 2025 “the year of the octopus” in its annual review of Britain’s seas.A mild winter followed by an exceptionally warm spring prompted unprecedented numbers of Mediterranean octopuses to take up residence along England’s south coast, from Penzance in Cornwall to south Devon.“The scale of the catch [recorded by local fishers] was of the order of about 13 times what we would normally expect in Cornish waters,” said Matt Slater, a marine conservation officer at Cornwall Wildlife Trust. “When we added up the numbers, approximately 233,000 octopuses were caught in UK waters this year – that’s a huge increase from what you would normally expect.”Octopus walking by Jenny KentThe common or Mediterranean octopus, Octopus vulgaris, is native to UK waters but ordinarily in such small numbers it is rarely seen. A sudden increase in the population – a bloom – is caused by a combination of a mild winter followed by a warm breeding season in the spring. The ideal conditions meant that more of the larvae of the common octopus were likely to survive, said Slater, possibly in part fuelled by the large numbers of spider crabs that have also been recorded along the south coast in recent years.The last time an octopus bloom of the size observed in 2025 was recorded was 1950, with records from the UK’s Marine Biological Association showing the last bloom recorded prior to that was in 1900.The huge numbers of octopuses along the south coast meant they could be easily spotted in shallow waters for the first time in recent history. Video footage from divers shows octopuses gathering in groups – they are usually solitary – as well as “walking” along the seabed on the tips of their limbs. One was even filmed grabbing at an underwater camera.“The first time I dived off the Lizard peninsula this year I saw five octopuses,” said Slater. “And these are big. There are two types of octopus in UK waters. There is the curled octopus, which is quite small, only getting to about the size of a football, but these common octopuses can be up to a metre and a half wide.”Another mild winter going into 2026 meant it was possible there could be a second bloom next year, said Slater, because historically, under these conditions, the blooms have repeated themselves for two consecutive years.Octopus grabbing a camera by Matthew Bradshaw“However, it is unlikely, based on past events, that it will go on for a long time,” he said. “But the sea keeps giving us surprises at the moment so it’s quite an unpredictable situation.”The Wildlife Trusts noted some of the other “surprises, successes and joyful moments” around the UK coastline included a record number of grey seals observed by the Cumbria Wildlife Trust, as well as record numbers of puffins on Skomer, an island off the coast of Wales famed for the birds.Other wildlife was recorded in unusual places. A volunteer with Shoresearch, the Wildlife Trusts’ national citizen science survey programme, recorded the first Capellinia fustifera sea slug in Yorkshire, a 12mm mollusc that resembles a gnarly root vegetable and is usually found in the south-west. In addition, a variable blenny, a Mediterranean fish, was discovered off the coast of Sussex for the first time. Populations had previously been limited to the West Country.A group of grey seals in South Walney, Cumbria. Photograph: Gemma de Gouveia/Wildlife TrustsNot everything was good news, though. “The year was bookended by environmental disasters,” said Ruth Williams, head of marine conservation at the Wildlife Trusts. “[There was] the North Sea tanker collision in March and in November the release of tonnes of biobeads off the Sussex coast. Our Wildlife Trusts staff and volunteers are making huge efforts to protect and restore our shorelines.”

Costa Rica Biologists Identify New Insect Species in Museum Collections

Biologists at the University of Costa Rica have uncovered 16 new species of leafhoppers after examining insect collections that sat untouched in museums for over three decades. The find also includes nine species newly recorded in the country, pushing the total known Scaphytopius species in Costa Rica to 29. Carolina Godoy and Andrés Arias-Penna led […] The post Costa Rica Biologists Identify New Insect Species in Museum Collections appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Biologists at the University of Costa Rica have uncovered 16 new species of leafhoppers after examining insect collections that sat untouched in museums for over three decades. The find also includes nine species newly recorded in the country, pushing the total known Scaphytopius species in Costa Rica to 29. Carolina Godoy and Andrés Arias-Penna led the research, starting their review in 2023. They pored over specimens from the University of Costa Rica’s insect museum and others held in U.S. institutions. “We looked at material stored for years and spotted many unidentified species in the Scaphytopius genus,” Godoy explained. “This led us to detail their taxonomy and confirm the new ones.” These leafhoppers, part of one of the planet’s largest insect families, feed on plants and jump like small cicadas. Adults measure under six millimeters, with younger stages even smaller. Though not widely recognized, they hold key positions in ecosystems and signal environmental conditions. The team pinpointed the new species in biologically rich spots across Costa Rica. Locations include La Selva Biological Station in Sarapiquí, humid Caribbean forests, the Osa Peninsula, and Talamanca’s mountains. Some names reflect local features or pay tribute to scientists: Scaphytopius vulcanus draws from Guanacaste’s Cacao Volcano, while S. hansoni honors biologist Paul Hanson. Others, like S. ancorus and S. viperans, evoke their distinct forms. Before this study, published in Zootaxa in September 2025, records of the genus in Costa Rica stopped at four species in 1982. The update fills a long-standing gap and shows how museum archives can yield fresh insights. Arias-Penna, who curates the UCR insect museum, noted that these insects might appear in everyday settings. “People could find them in their gardens without realizing,” he said. The discovery underscores Costa Rica’s role as a biodiversity hub, where protected areas still hide unknowns. Researchers stress that the actual number of species may exceed current counts, calling for continued exploration. Godoy and Arias-Penna’s work not only adds to global knowledge but also supports conservation efforts by highlighting overlooked groups. This breakthrough came from routine checks of old collections, proving that science advances through patient review. As Costa Rica protects its natural wealth, findings like these reinforce the need to study even the smallest inhabitants. The post Costa Rica Biologists Identify New Insect Species in Museum Collections appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Along the Texas Coast, a New Sanctuary Aims to Protect the Endangered and Rare Whooping Crane

Partners at the International Crane Foundation and The Conservation Fund have secured permanent protection of more than 3,300 acres of high-priority wintering habitat for whooping cranes near Port Aransas, Texas

WOLFBERRY WHOOPING CRANE SANCTUARY, Texas (AP) — Carter Crouch has been fascinated by the whooping crane’s conservation story for as long as he can remember. The white bird, named for its “whooping” call, is one of the rarest in North America and was among the first to be protected by the Endangered Species Act.It’s a story that began decades ago when they were on the brink of extinction. Today, more than 550 whooping cranes migrate from Canada to Texas in the winter. It's the last self-sustaining wild flock in the world.A new sanctuary aims to further protect them. The International Crane Foundation, The Conservation Fund and the Coastal Bend Bays & Estuaries Program announced Thursday the acquisition of more than 3,300 acres (1,336 hectares) of vital winter habitat for the whooping crane. Only 16 of the birds existed in Texas in the early 1940s, but thanks to decades of conservation work, they’ve rebounded. Still, more work remains as the birds face threats from urban development, climate change, infrastructure for planet-warming oil, gas and coal and more.Crouch, director of Gulf Coast programs for the International Crane Foundation, said the crane’s story is complicated with many successes and some setbacks, but all in all, conservationists have come a long way. “We have a long way to go still, so there’s a lot of story to be written, and I’m super excited to be a small part of that.” An imperiled species, threatened habitat Standing at about 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall, the whooping crane is the tallest bird in North America with wingspans of up to 7.5 feet (2.3 meters) wide, so they need large landscapes to live in. They're snowy white as adults with black wing tips and a red forehead. It's one of 15 crane species in the world across Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and North America — 10 of which are threatened with extinction. The last wild and self-sustaining flock of whooping cranes breeds and nests in the wetlands in and around Canada’s Wood Buffalo National Park before beginning their 45-day 2,500-mile (4,023-kilometer) southern migration each winter to forage and roost in and near Texas’ Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. The birds, which can live more than 20 years in the wild, mate for life and spend much of their lives raising families. Cranes around the world face numerous challenges. Poaching and poisons threaten some species, and the wetlands and grasslands they need to survive are disappearing. Since the 1970s, 35% of the world’s wetlands have been lost because of human activities, according to the United Nations. The Fish and Wildlife Service estimates the U.S. alone has lost at least 80% of its grasslands.Climate change is worsening the threats. Sea level rise can wipe out the low-lying coastal wetlands in Texas, and loss of permafrost due to warming is among their habitat threats in Canada. Changing rain patterns mean there's less wetland availability in the Great Plains and other regions. “Generally it’s just a really long-lived group of birds, so they’re pretty sensitive to some of these threats that we’re throwing at them,” Crouch said. A safe haven for whooping cranes and other species On a recent morning, after a thick fog cleared, Crouch and a team of scientists roared a boat aptly called Crane Seeker down a channel along the Gulf of Mexico to look for whooping cranes. They anchored the boat, pointed their spotting scope, and patiently observed the birds for nearly an hour, diligently jotting down every minute what they were doing. Flying. Wading in shallow water. Eating crabs or wolfberries.The federally endangered aplomado falcon and the threatened black rail bird also call this region home. The new sanctuary southwest of Houston is made up of two properties purchased for just over $8.4 million thanks to grants, fundraising and hundreds of donations. One property, named the Wolfberry Whooping Crane Sanctuary, will be owned and managed by the International Crane Foundation, and the other by The Conservation Fund until the Coastal Bend Bays & Estuaries Program buys it off and ultimately owns it. The name is inspired by the Carolina wolfberry, a shrub that produces a small, red berry whooping cranes love to eat. It's found here in the coastal habitats of Texas, along with the blue crabs, mollusks and fish they also eat. Conservationists have a lot of work to do on the sanctuary. Much of the prairie has been overtaken by shrubs, so they'll be using prescribed burns and other means to restore the grassland. With the public's help, they'll also plant smooth cordgrass to improve the marshes and protect shorelines from erosion, which will also serve as storm buffers for nearby residents. Volunteers will also assist with the annual Christmas bird counts. And once the sanctuary is up and running, they hope to add guided tours and other educational events. A reliable place to see whooping cranes These protected lands near Texas’ Aransas National Wildlife Refuge are the only place in the U.S. where people can reliably see whooping cranes, said Julie Shackelford, Texas director for The Conservation Fund. It's a destination for birders worldwide, with visitors boosting the economies of nearby communities like Rockport and Port Aransas. In the winters, a “couple hundred people every day go out just to see the whooping crane” with their young, said Shackelford, a fellow bird enthusiast. She described helping to protect the land for future generations as “super gratifying.” Mike Forsberg knows these birds intimately. As a conservation photographer, he's spent countless hours over the years taking photos of North America's cranes, even publishing books about them. He has a podcast about whooping cranes, too, and just finished shooting a documentary. He calls himself a proud member of the growing “craniac community.” “The heart of keeping anything on the Earth ... has to do with making it personal to you, and cranes are just a great doorway in,” said Forsberg, a faculty member at the University of Nebraska. His 2024 book, “Into Whooperland: A Photographer’s Journey with Whooping Cranes” posed the question of whether these birds can survive a 21st century world. “Of course they can,” he said. “They’re resilient. But it’s up to us. And these habitats that are being protected now by the (International) Crane Foundation and by folks who just manage their land with a certain ethos ... that’s critical.”Pineda reported from Los Angeles.The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environmentCopyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Photos You Should See – December 2025

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