ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ research helps Vermont farmers and grassland birds co-exist

With the full moon still hanging in the morning sky and the sun beginning to rise, Noah Perlut, Ph.D., associate professor and chair of the Department of Environmental Studies, and three of his students set out in search of bobolinks and their chicks on a picturesque farm nestled along Vermontβs Lake Champlain.
The purpose of the project is to help landowners better understand the birds on their property so that they may co-exist, balancing farming practices and production, with the needs of grassland birds.
βIt has been amazing to work with these landowners,β Perlut said. βThey've really listened to the science. Theyβre willing to look at this research and realize that if they change their habits a little bit, the birds and the farms can both thrive.β
For 18 years, Perlut has been studying the decline in these grassland birds in relation to farming activity. The research helps create a story of the birds, allowing owners of the land that they share to form a connection to them.
βFor some of these birds, we have data on what their mother did, what their grandmother did and what their great-grandmother did in terms of where they bred, how many offspring they had, how many of the offspring survived and where they bred,β explained ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ graduate student Emma White. βSo, we have this really amazing lineage of the families of these birds.β
Based on these stories, some landowners have made changes to their operations to prevent harming the birds.
βWe've modified our cutting schedules to accommodate the birdsβ stated Sam Dixon, dairy manager at Shelburne Farms. βWe mow very early in the season before the birds arrive, then wait 65 days before we do the second cutting.β
Each summer bobolinks take massive, nonstop trans-oceanic flights from their winter home in Argentina to nest in Vermont hayfields. The trips, up to 2300 miles, are some of the longest non-stop flights yet identified by songbirds.
βThe journey that they make to Shelburne every year is really amazing,β Dixon said. βSo, I feel some responsibility to provide them with a place that they can come back to.β
The research Perlut and his students are conducting has captured the attention of the greater Burlington area. Their project was recently featured in the . And a local brewery, Zero Gravity, has joined in their mission of protecting the birds.
The brewery developed a special beer, the Bobolink Saison, to raise awareness and money for the research.
βIt's been amazing support, both financially and also in terms of bringing a new community into understanding and thinking about these birds, people that just don't think of birds every day,β Perlut commented.
A majority of the funding for the project comes from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
For the students spending their summer days in the hayfields of Vermont, the hands-on research is invaluable in helping them in their development as scientists.
βPart of the reason I came to ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ is the fact that it is research-heavy,β White said. βComing out to these fields, finding the nests and spending time with the birds is definitely a huge draw for me.β
Perlut added, βI want the students to understand science and how science happens. The inquiry process, the process of collecting data, what to do with the data and how to get it out to the broader world.β
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