Urban Hazards to Birds

Luke Franke / Audubon

Home 9 Our Work 9 Conservation 9 Urban Conservation 9 Urban Hazards to Birds

Urban habitats can be hazardous.

In the long evolutionary history of birds, our modern cities are brand new appearances on the landscape. Seattle’s first skyscraper, Smith Tower, was practically just erected in 1914. Since then, our cities have continued to grow and change dramatically, bringing new hazards to birds: free-ranging cats, glass, artificial light at night, and pesticides, to name a few. Not all birds are equiped to navigate these hazards, and the impacts can be devastating.

Birds Connect Seattle is committed to reducing urban hazards to birds. Learn more about urban hazards and what you can do to help.

Free-ranging Cats

If you have a cat in your life, one of the most powerful ways you can help birds is to keep the kitty inside, on a leash, or in a catio. It is so much safer for your cat, too. Click to learn more about saving birds by keeping cats indoors.

     Charles Lam/Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0
Glass Windows and Structures

Birds behave as if they are unable to see glass. The literal impacts are astonishing: up to one billion birds die due to collisions with buidlings each year in the United States. Click to learn how you can prevent bird-window collisions.

           Tom Hissong/Great Backyard Bird Count

 

Artificial Light at Night

Artificial light at night can have a “beacon effect” on birds. This often occurs during migration periods, when large numbers of birds are attracted toward brightly lit cities and become disoriented, making them more vulnerable to collisions and other urban hazards. Click to learn how you can reduce the impacts of artificial light at night on birds.

Still Vision/Flickr/CC BY 2.0
Rat Poison and Other Pesticides

You know who loves a rat? Your local Red-tailed Hawk. Bad news, though: popular rodent control practices create poison-laced rats that can also harm animals that eat rats. Click to learn how you can reduce the impacts of rat poisons and other pesticides on birds.

Sign up for SCAN!

Sign up for the Seattle Conservation Activist Network (SCAN) to be notified of advocacy opportunities for the protection of birds.

Join the Seattle Bird Collision Monitoring Project for Fall 2023

Join the Seattle Bird Collision Monitoring Project for Fall 2023

Volunteers are needed for the fall 2023 season of the Seattle Bird Collision Monitoring Project. Joining has never been easier; you can even participate from home! With your help, we can understand and prevent bird-window collisions, one of the worst causes of human-related bird death in Seattle.

Honor Snoqualmie Request

Honor Snoqualmie Request

No longer a barrier, our new name represents an open door for new communities to join us in our mission to advocate and organize for cities where people and birds thrive.

Hummingbirds and Window Collisions

Hummingbirds and Window Collisions

Read about hummingbirds and their vulnerability to window collisions. Learn ways to help prevent and further our understanding of hummingbirds vulnerability to window strikes.