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The people preserving the scientific practice of bird banding

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Why This Matters

This article highlights the vital role of bird banding in scientific research and conservation efforts, emphasizing the importance of preserving traditional techniques amidst technological advancements. It showcases how community involvement and hands-on practices contribute to understanding bird migration and protecting natural ecosystems, which benefits both the environment and the tech-driven field of ecological monitoring.

Key Takeaways

It’s a windy night and unusually warm for October, as visitors gather at the Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory in Milford, Ont., for the “Starry Nights with Saw-whets” event. One barred owl was caught early in the evening, before any of the participants arrived, and is being kept in an owl carrier for closer observation later in the night. But now, word is getting around: it’s probably too warm to see any saw-whet owls, a disappointment to the attendees who have come to see them up-close and learn about nighttime migration monitoring. “South wind,” station manager Ashley Jensen mutters as she checks her phone for radar weather updates. It’s not the right kind of wind current for the migrating owls that are making their way from the north.

Volunteers gather regularly at the Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory in the Prince Edward Point National Wildlife Area in Milford, Ont., to band birds with numbered metal rings — a scientific technique used as a knowledge and conservation tool.

At the observatory, volunteers gather for bird banding, a scientific technique in which a small, uniquely numbered metal ring is attached to a bird’s leg to track movement, migration routes and lifespan. Jensen is the bander-in-chief, while another bander, Ketha Gillespie, has donned a felt owl suit for the public event. Other visitors are humming with excitement despite the unpromising weather.

Prepared with thermoses and blankets, they gather in front of the banding station as Mira Furgoch, the observatory’s vice-president, gives a presentation about the owls and the station’s conservation efforts using a television that will also show live footage of the birds being handled. That is, if any are found.

Visitors at the “Starry Nights with Saw-whets” event at the Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory watch a presentation about the owls, hoping to spot one themselves as the evening progresses.

Bird-banding stations like Prince Edward Point collect data and conserve natural spaces that are invaluable habitats. They respond to factors affecting avian populations like disease, climate change, birth rates and more, while engaging the public in the natural world and promoting conservation. As of July 2025, the North American Bird Banding Program database includes 85 million banding records and 5.5 million encounters with banded birds. That includes both encounters reported by the public and recaptures reported by bird banders.

Unlike people, birds cross borders freely, and the program relies on migration data collected and shared by both Canada and the United States. But the stability of American bird-banding efforts is at risk. The 2026 U.S. federal budget proposes eliminating the Ecosystems Mission Area, the parent agency overseeing scientific bird-banding efforts.

Station manager Ashley Jensen holds a banded barred owl that was captured before the ”Starry Nights with Saw-whets” event at Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory in Milford, Ont. Because the barred owl is a predator, it was held in a carrier and released at a distance from the observatory.

Barred owls have larger legs than some other migratory birds banded at the observatory, so they take a specifically large and sturdy band.

The possibility of disruption to scientific efforts in Canada as a result of what’s happening in the United States is real, and it is causing anxiety among some Canadian banding stations. If there were to be a shutdown on the U.S. side, Matthew Fuirst from Birds Canada explains that it would affect the collection of data that promotes conservation efforts. “If there was no U.S. bird-banding program, Canada would lose a crucial part of North America’s migratory bird science. It would really hinder our data availability, past and future, for population estimates, habitat protection and hunting regulations,” Fuirst says.

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