Skip to main content

New UW study shows how COVID lockdowns affected Northwest birds

Published on August 16, 2022

Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) on Lake Union, seen looking southwest from Hamlin Street Shoreline Street End, Eastlake, Seattle, Washington
Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) on Lake Union, seen looking southwest from Hamlin Street Shoreline Street End, Eastlake, Seattle, Washington Image Credit: Joe Mabel (CC BY-SA 4.0)

While the unusual quiet of the pandemic’s first months was hard on many people, it allowed birds in the Pacific Northwest to use a wider range of habitats, according to a newly published University of Washington study.

The study, published Thursday in Scientific Reports, found that in Pacific Northwest cities under lockdown, birds were just as likely to be found in highly developed urban areas as in less-developed green spaces.

“Our findings suggest that some birds may have been able to use more spaces in cities because our human footprint was a little lighter,” said Olivia Sanderfoot, who completed the study as a doctoral researcher at the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences.

The study was co-authored by Joel Kaufman, a professor in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, and Beth Gardner, an associate professor in the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences.

Continue reading at The Seattle Times.


Originally written by Christine Clarridge for The Seattle Times.
Search by categories

Twitter Feed