A Beautiful Noise
With poles set about a volleyball net-width apart strung top to bottom with barely visible hairnet-thick webbing, the “trap” is set. From a speaker just below the netting “tea-Cher, tea-Cher, tea-Cher,” the call of the male ovenbird, plays.
Amid the forest, carpeted with ferns and maple saplings, student researchers accompanied by biology professor sit quietly, several feet from the webbing. A few ovenbirds respond; the territorial bird is curious about the call of the intruder. The students anxiously wait.
A bird swoops in, and
callout1
The students walk quickly to the netting to aid the entangled bird, gently freeing first the feet and wings, and then the head, and eventually the whole bird.
“This is super great,” exclaims Sammy Cowell, one of the student researchers. “This is the best day of my life.”
Cowell has long had an interest in birds; he hopes to go into international bird rescue someday.
After the data are collected—the length of the beak, the bird’s sex and weight, etc.—they carefully release the bird.
“I never thought that we would actually be holding birds,” says student researcher Thuy-Nhi Nguyen. “Before I got here I didn’t know anything about birds. I knew nothing. I was so scared I was going to screw this all up.”
The wonder of birds
Nguyen, a senior at Calvin, has plans to become a physician's assistant, but her summer of research opened her eyes to the wonder of birds. “Everywhere I go, I hear their sounds now. I can identify them. Before, birds were nonexistent to me.”
After lunch, the students relocate the “trap” and attempt to attract a hermit thrush. They are successful at drawing one in with its flute-like song.
This one, though, gets away before it can be measured and banded. However, they deem the first day of banding a success.
“I love ecology stuff like this,” says Leanna DeJong, another student researcher on the project. “I took the research in biology class and decided to look into it more. After I took the ornithology class, I was more excited about how complex birds are. They’re a pretty amazing part of God’s creation, and looking for them is kind of addicting, too.”
Hearing what the students have to say is gratifying for
Beyond the measuring and banding,
The effect of noise on songbirds
“The bigger picture,” he said, “is to study the effect of noise on songbirds. We’re trying to understand if we can bring birds into noisy areas where they are no longer found. First, we attempt to attract them to new areas by playing back their species-specific songs, and then we can measure how successful they are in those areas.”
In this summer’s initial study, students daily collected data at nine sites with playback speakers resounding the songs of six bird species, as well as nine random non-playback sites.
While previous studies have used playback to encourage habitat establishment by an individual species, few have researched the potential of attracting a community of multiple species, Proppe said.
What
“This finding is important for a number of reasons. First, it validates the use of song playback as a method to increase songbird establishment in Northern Michigan forests. Second, it shows that increasing numbers of a few focal species
Why it matters is that people like birds, and by attracting them to urban parks and roadsides, more people are likely to see birds and there is merit in that, Proppe said. “People tend to value what they see,” he said. “From the birds’ side of things, a lot of species are in fairly steep decline, and if we can increase their habitat by attracting them to areas where they aren’t normally found, that’s significant.”
Additionally,
Birds have been eliminated from many noisy areas in the U.S. and are continuing to lose habitat, Proppe said. “We’re looking for a way to help them adapt,” he said. “Birds are an important part of our ecosystem, our
Lynn Rosendale is managing editor of Spark.
Professor ʰDZ’s second chance
Darren Proppe has often seen God’s power and goodness displayed in nature. In fact, it’s what Proppe has built his career upon. “That’s when I’m really
More recently, though,
In 2010, prior to
About a year later, he found another mass.
It was during this time that
Upon recovering from the arduous treatment,
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Still, the initial prognosis was grim: 99 percent of patients with his medical history would not survive for more than one year.
“I prayed that God would show me His goodness,” said
In a second scan, before any treatment, the doctors found less disease than in the first one: nothing in the liver, nothing in the skin. “This was all good news,” said
Still, they awaited results from a biopsy.
“Because of the taxing side effects from my previous round of chemotherapy, my mom kept praying for me not to lose my hair and my energy,” said
When the results came back, the
“It’s amazing how your perspective changes,” said
Just a few weeks prior,
And he is reassured that God is good. “I still struggle with why God is giving me a second chance when a lot of others don’t get that chance. Both times we’ve seen people also in intense struggles die around us.
“I really felt like I saw God’s power and goodness right after I got the terrible diagnosis, though,” he said. “I prayed and cried out to God then, and I got the clear message that we could and would take care of me and that he could and would take care of my family. I felt that God’s goodness went beyond my circumstances.”
Overall,
To learn more about Darren