Tracking migration

Capturing bird population trends

Allison Byrd, a former IU research associate, climbs a tower to check on a Motus Wildlife Tracking System at the T.C. Steele State Historic Site. Photo by James Brosher, Indiana University

Migratory birds provide essential ecological services such as pollination, seed dispersal, and insect control while also harboring the potential to transmit disease to humans and other wildlife. Over the past half-century, bird populations in North America have decreased by three billion, or about 29 percent. To protect birds and prevent disease transmission, a better understanding of bird migration is needed.

The project

Researchers: Ellen Ketterson, Geoffrey Brown, Allison Byrd, Eve Cusack, and Adam Fudickar

Using multiple technologies and techniques—including Motus stations, GPS tags, and stable isotopes—a research team at IU is tracking wildlife more effectively and economically than ever before.

A core component of this work is setting up and managing tracking stations at the T.C. Steele State Historic site, the Morgan-Monroe State Forest, and the Kent Farm Research Station as part of an international collaboration called the Motus Wildlife Tracking System, a program of Bird Studies Canada. The stations have multiple antennas, cables, and a receiver that detect nanotag devices on nearby birds. When a bird flies by one of the stations, the tag is picked up and recorded. Every few months, a member of the research team will download the station data and upload it to Motus where it can be viewed by the global research community. Using the vast Motus Wildlife Tracking System of approximately 1500 stations in the western hemisphere, researchers can track more birds over larger geographic areas and across their entire migration.

From December 2020 through April 2021, the IU Environmental Resilience Institute's Motus stations collectively made 113 detections of tagged birds. While some of these birds were tagged locally, others migrated from places such as British Columbia. The team has also worked with researchers from other institutions to confirm detections that will inform their research.

At the Motus station at Kent Farm Research Station alone as of June 2023, 141 different birds have been detected representing 22 species.

As part of this project, the IU research team has tagged 38 male juncos, a type of sparrow, to learn about the timing of their departures and migrations. This information will help researchers understand how juncos’ migratory patterns relate to environmental conditions, pesticide use, infectious diseases, and climate change.

Project data

Through Motus stations and nanotags, the researchers are providing information on birds and their migrations.

The stations record data on the birds they detect. The information is then transmitted to the Motus database.

Along with this information, the researchers are looking at when the juncos they are monitoring depart from the station on their migration. They are also collecting data on the birds’ health during the capture/tagging process and the environmental conditions that may impact departure.

The Motus stations contain multiple antennas, cables, and a receiver. This equipment can be placed on existing structures, but a small, new structure was erected for the Kent Farm Motus Station. The equipment detects the pulses of nanotags of birds that fly by. The data is retrieved every three months by a member of the research team, cleaned up, and sent to the Motus database.

For the juncos, the research team is placing nanotags on the birds and monitoring their activity to determine when they depart the wintering grounds. They are also collecting blood samples to look at incidences of diseases such as malaria.

The station reports on the date of detection, the location of and date when the tag was originally deployed, the species of the bird, and the latitude and longitude of where the tag originated.

The data is in spreadsheets and a virtual timeline.

The data is available online from Motus. The data is updated every couple of months.