Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York

Tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) have been a periodic bird-strike problem at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFKIA), New York, New York, causing runway closures, flight delays, and damage to aircraft following the ingestion of bird flocks into engines. We examined 65 tree swallows collecte...

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Main Authors: Glen E. Bernhardt, Zachary J. Patton, Lisa A. Kutschbach-Brohl, Richard A. Dolbeer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utah State University 2017-02-01
Series:Human-Wildlife Interactions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol3/iss2/12
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spelling doaj-68296ddcad3a4363aa4e95c5bd9c4e432020-11-25T03:41:39ZengUtah State UniversityHuman-Wildlife Interactions2155-38742155-38742017-02-013210.26077/avb2-z458Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New YorkGlen E. Bernhardt0Zachary J. Patton1Lisa A. Kutschbach-Brohl2Richard A. Dolbeer3U.S. Department of AgricultureU.S. Department of AgricultureU.S. Department of AgricultureU.S. Department of AgricultureTree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) have been a periodic bird-strike problem at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFKIA), New York, New York, causing runway closures, flight delays, and damage to aircraft following the ingestion of bird flocks into engines. We examined 65 tree swallows collected at JFKIA in October 2001 to determine food sources that were attracting the birds to the airport. Digestive tracts of all 65 specimens contained northern bayberry fruits (Myrica pensylvanica), averaging 15.6 fruits per bird or 3.4% of the bird’s body mass in specimens where the entire tract was dissected. Bayberry fruits are a highly attractive food source for tree swallows, especially during fall migration when insects are limited. Beginning late in 2001, a bayberry removal program was instituted at JFKIA. We examined tree swallow strike reports from JFKIA before and after this program began and found a 75% reduction in the number of strikes after removal of bayberry bushes. Removal of bayberry from coastal airports like JFKIA may facilitate the dispersal of tree swallow flocks that use airports as resting sites during their migration and may reduce the risk to birds and dangerous encounters with aircraft, thus limiting problems caused by runway closures and flight delays. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol3/iss2/12airportbayberrybird strikehuman–wildlife conflictsmyricatachycineta bicolortree swallow
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Glen E. Bernhardt
Zachary J. Patton
Lisa A. Kutschbach-Brohl
Richard A. Dolbeer
spellingShingle Glen E. Bernhardt
Zachary J. Patton
Lisa A. Kutschbach-Brohl
Richard A. Dolbeer
Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
Human-Wildlife Interactions
airport
bayberry
bird strike
human–wildlife conflicts
myrica
tachycineta bicolor
tree swallow
author_facet Glen E. Bernhardt
Zachary J. Patton
Lisa A. Kutschbach-Brohl
Richard A. Dolbeer
author_sort Glen E. Bernhardt
title Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
title_short Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
title_full Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
title_fullStr Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
title_full_unstemmed Management of Bayberry in Relation to Tree-Swallow Strikes at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York
title_sort management of bayberry in relation to tree-swallow strikes at john f. kennedy international airport, new york
publisher Utah State University
series Human-Wildlife Interactions
issn 2155-3874
2155-3874
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) have been a periodic bird-strike problem at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFKIA), New York, New York, causing runway closures, flight delays, and damage to aircraft following the ingestion of bird flocks into engines. We examined 65 tree swallows collected at JFKIA in October 2001 to determine food sources that were attracting the birds to the airport. Digestive tracts of all 65 specimens contained northern bayberry fruits (Myrica pensylvanica), averaging 15.6 fruits per bird or 3.4% of the bird’s body mass in specimens where the entire tract was dissected. Bayberry fruits are a highly attractive food source for tree swallows, especially during fall migration when insects are limited. Beginning late in 2001, a bayberry removal program was instituted at JFKIA. We examined tree swallow strike reports from JFKIA before and after this program began and found a 75% reduction in the number of strikes after removal of bayberry bushes. Removal of bayberry from coastal airports like JFKIA may facilitate the dispersal of tree swallow flocks that use airports as resting sites during their migration and may reduce the risk to birds and dangerous encounters with aircraft, thus limiting problems caused by runway closures and flight delays.
topic airport
bayberry
bird strike
human–wildlife conflicts
myrica
tachycineta bicolor
tree swallow
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol3/iss2/12
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