Our first field season during the summer of that year involved a team of three researchers based at Tswalu Kalahari Reserve: Fitztitute postdoctoral fellows Susie Cunningham and Rowan Martin and UP doctoral student Ben Smit. In the 10 years since, the Hot Birds Research Programme (HBRP) has grown into a team of about 20 people based at the Fitztitute, UP, National Zoological Garden and Rhodes University, with a network of collaborators spanning several overseas universities.
During the HBRP’s first decade, we have learnt much about how higher temperatures affect desert birds. Small birds face a significant risk of lethal dehydration on very hot days; evaporating water to lose heat, often by panting, is the only way birds can avoid lethal heat stress. In extremely hot weather, small birds can die of dehydration in a matter of hours.
In the intensely hot deserts of the American south-west and the interior of Australia, climate change is producing conditions under which catastrophic mortality events involving thousands – occasionally millions – of birds will occur far more often than in the past. Some range-restricted Australian species could be driven to extinction within a matter of days in extreme heatwaves. If this sounds alarmist, consider that Australia lost one third of its entire population of a flying-fox species in just two days of extreme heat late last year.
This story is from the November 2019 edition of African Birdlife.
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This story is from the November 2019 edition of African Birdlife.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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