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Largest City In Northern California To Adopt Bird-Friendly Building Guidelines

mark handler

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Largest City In Northern California To Adopt Bird-Friendly Building Guidelines

Thursday, March 5, 2015

http://www.chattanoogan.com/2015/3/5/295400/Largest-City-In-Northern-California.aspx

San José, the capital of Silicon Valley, has become the fourth and largest California city to enact bird-friendly building guidelines. Previously, ordinances were adopted by San Francisco in 2011 and Oakland in 2013, while guidelines were adopted by Sunnyvale in 2014.

The implementation of Bird-Safe Building Design Standards in San José concludes several months of research led by the San José Environmental Services Department (ESD) and collaborative work with the Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society (SCVAS) and the Loma Prieta Chapter of the Sierra Club. San José’sguidelines are based on American Bird Conservancy’s Bird Friendly Building Design and will be applied citywide on a voluntary basis.

We are very excited that the city has taken action to reduce the risk of bird collision with glass windows and building facades. It shows that nature and birds are an important part of the city’s sustainable future and are valued by San José’s residents, leadership, and city staff,” said Dr. Shani Kleinhaus, Environmental Advocate for SCVAS, who actively worked with city staff on this action. “It is especially important for San José because we are located in the Pacific Flyway Migration Corridor and as such, many millions of birds move through this area twice a year.”

Birds strike glass because they cannot see it as an obstacle. They fly into reflections of trees and sky, or attempt to fly through transparent glass walls. Collision with glass is now implicated in the decline of many migratory species in the United States.

“Without question, bird collisions are one of the most significant causes of bird mortality worldwide. It’s a problem that is probably escalating every year,” said Dr. Christine Sheppard, Birds Collisions Campaign Manager for American Bird Conservancy (ABC) and one of the world’s leading experts on the issue.

“Implementation of Bird-Friendly Building Guidelines constitutes a giant step forward in better protecting our birds and wildlife. Anything we can do to reduce the hazards our environment poses for local and migratory birds is the right thing to do,” said Mike Ferreira, Conservation Chair for the Loma Prieta Chapter of the Sierra Club.

“We worked closely with our city departments and non-profit partners to craft and implement a new set of bird-friendly guidelines in San José to protect birds and wildlife,” said Kerrie Romanow, director of the San José ESD. “We continue to work with our local partners to reach common goals and protect wildlife and the environment.”

ESD staff have developed a factsheet and checklist that provide information on bird-safe design and outline voluntary bird-safe building measures, such as recommendations to:

· Reduce large areas of transparent or reflective glass.

· Avoid transparent glass skyways, walkways, and entryways, as well as free-standing glass walls and transparent building corners.

· Avoid the funneling of open space toward a building façade.

· Strategically place landscaping to reduce reflection and views of foliage through glass.

· Reduce or eliminate up-lighting and spotlights on buildings.

· Turn non-emergency lighting off at night, especially during bird migration season (February-May and August-November).

“Parts of this problem are very simple to understand. For example, cues like window frames and even dirt tell people where to expect glass. Birds don’t learn these cues and so they take reflections literally or try to fly through transparent glass to reach something beyond it,” according to Dr. Sheppard.

Dr. Sheppard authored the widely used Bird-Friendly Building Design publication (available at collisions.abcbirds.org), which provides comprehensive solutions to reduce bird mortality from building collisions. The 58-page publication also focuses on the causes of collisions and provides a detailed appendix on the biological science behind the issue.

Reduction of bird strikes with new buildings can be achieved with simple and cost-effective means, said Dr. Kleinhaus. With appropriate architectural design, many bird hazards can simply be avoided. Also, visual cues may be implemented. For example, fritting—the placement of ceramic lines or dots on glass—is often already used to reduce air conditioning costs by lowering heat gain in windows. When fritting is applied in patterns that birds can see, it reduces the likelihood of collisions while still allowing people to enjoy natural light and to see out clearly from the inside of the building.

In Silicon Valley, companies such as Facebook and Intuit are applying bird-friendly frit to glass windows and facades in their new campuses.

While bird conservationists have long known that a large number of birds are killed each year by glass, the issue of fatal bird collisions gained national attention following release of the most comprehensive study of its kind, the peer-reviewed, “Bird–building Collisions in the United States: Estimates of Annual Mortality and Species Vulnerability.” The study was authored by federal scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It found that between 365 and 988 million birds are likely killed in the United States each year as a result of collisions with buildings.

Some species seem disproportionately vulnerable to collision with buildings. In San José, vulnerable species include: Anna’s Hummingbird, Cedar Waxwing, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Lesser Goldfinch, Hermit Thrush, Varied Thrush, American Robin, and Cooper’s Hawk.

In July 2014, Dr. Kleinhaus submitted an opinion letter that was published in the San José Mercury News titled “Birds and glass: San José can prevent needless deaths of birds with building rules.”

ABC's efforts to reduce fatal bird collisions in the U.S. are made possible in part by the generous support of the Leon Levy Foundation.
 
He can be a mean little meat eating you know what at times. Goes after the doberman and mastiff....he also rides a skateboard and dunks on a mini basketball hoop.
 
Birds don’t learn these cues
Maybe that is what the term "Bird Brain" means

Bats don't have this problem, Maybe the birds will evolve over time and have the "radar" capability of a bat if humans don't interfere.
 
I always thought having a bird as a pet was cruel...born to fly, locked in a cage....

.

.

UNTIL...

My kids called me a said a fancy bird was on our roof (area with window access)

They texted me a pic and it was a beautiful white cockatiel.

They opened the window, called to it, it walked over and let them pick it up.

I stopped on the way home to get a cage, bowl, food, stick, mirror...you know, bird stuff.

A soon as we put bird in the cage, he walked to the mirror and let out a wolf whistle! Obviously someones pet.

He also whistled a modified version of La Cucaracha, pretty hilarious.

We called the local vet, took him in to get his wings trimmed, put out "lost bird" flyers [punny]

My kids fell in love with the bird. They named him Sanders, like Colonel Sanders, they get the sick humor from me ;0

Carried him all over, played with him...super friendly bird.

Five weeks after he arrived, my son was playing with Sanders at the kitchen table. I don't know how long it takes for wing feathers to grow back, but Sanders was getting stir crazy.

With a leap and a few wing flaps he was off across the kitchen, and into...

.

.

.

.

the pot of turkey soup my wife had boiling on the stove.

Lost a lot of feathers, gasping for breath, shaking. Clearly, not. good.

Rushed him to a 24 hr. vet two towns over. Vet said he wasn't gonna make it.

Vet put him under a gas dome, lights out.

Kids were pretty upset. Wife was upset, mostly about her soup being ruined. And I missed having that bird around.

Sanders was pretty cool, if for only five weeks.
 
We can spend the money and degrade our architecture so the migrating birds can make it past San Jose and out to the Altamont Pass to be chopped up by the greenie windmills.
 
In relation to the the story:

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!

Jesus, Mary, Joseph and the donkey he rode in on carrying the cross. The state I live in.

I'm going to go stick an arrow in a turkey and do my part.

First world problems.

Brent.
 
The study was authored by federal scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It found that between 365 and 988 million birds are likely killed in the United States each year as a result of collisions with buildings.
And the study cost between 365 and 988 million dollars. That number was pulled out of thin air.
 
Used to do a lot of work in & around the downtown San Jose area. Not unusual to hear a "thump" and the locals call out "headache" then see the bird hit the sidewalk. If it was a pigeon (flying rat) a lot of people said "good" or "free dinner", if it was some other "cuter" bird then the ladies usually went "poor bird". I think that natural selection will take care of the problem, thanks Charlie Darwin.
 
\ said:
I think that natural selection will take care of the problem, thanks Charlie Darwin.
But if we let that happen only the smartest birds will survive, eventually they'll rid the world of the declining human species and form a democracy, in order to get votes they'll pass a civil rights law, even an ADA for the worst of the birds, the sparrows will say they are equal to the eagles, then avian society will decline to be taken over by another advancing species.
 
California Birds are Flying Safer Thanks to New Building Standards

by Jessica Ramos

March 9, 2015

http://www.care2.com/causes/california-birds-are-flying-safer-thanks-to-new-building-standards.html

There’s good news for northern California‘s birds! San José, the capital of Silicon Valley, is looking out for then by adopting bird-friendly standards for the city’s buildings.

San José is Stepping Up for the Birds

As reported in The Chattanoogan, San José is the fourth California city to adopt these building guidelines. San Francisco paved the way for helping birds in this way back in 2011, neighboring Oakland followed in 2013, and Sunnyvale joined in 2014.

Creating these new building standards was a real collaborative effort. The San José Environmental Services Department (ESD), Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society (SCVAS) and the Loma Prieta Chapter of the Sierra Club got together to create the city’s official Bird-Safe Building Design Standards.

The city’s location and commitment to wildlife made the new building guidelines a no-brainer. San José is situated smack-dab in the Pacific Flyway Migration Corridor. Two times a year, millions of birds will pass through the Corridor during migrations. The goal of the new standards is to reduce the number of (often fatal) collisions between birds and glass windows and the façades of buildings. The birds will “fly into reflections of trees and sky, or attempt to fly through transparent glass walls.” In San José, the frequent victims of these collisions are: Anna’s Hummingbird, Cedar Waxwing, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Lesser Goldfinch, Hermit Thrush, Varied Thrush, American Robin, and Cooper’s Hawk.

Keeping the birds safe isn’t rocket science, so it’s hard to understand why more cities aren’t adopting bird-friendly building standards. It can be as easy avoiding large chunks of transparent or reflective glass, shutting off non-emergency lights at night and adding fritting–ceramic lines or dots on glass–on existing structures. For example, Facebook is decorating its new campuses with frit.

This is Much More Than a Decor Issue

But this is much more than a decor issue. The bird collisions campaign manager for the American Bird Conservancy (ABC), Dr. Christine Sheppard explains in The Chattanoogan that, “Without question, bird collisions are one of the most significant causes of bird mortality worldwide.” And these collisions are on the rise.

The Washington Post reports that a 2014 survey found that, in the United States alone, between 365 and 988 million birds die from window collisions every year. That means that ten percent of all of America’s birds could be impacted. It also puts these collisions right behind stealthy feline predators as the “largest source of human-related menaces that kill birds directly.”

Interestingly, most of the bird crashes don’t happen on giant skyscrapers. In fact, 56 percent of the bird fatalities happen on buildings between four and 11 stories tall, or low-rises. After these smaller buildings, residential homes that range between one and three stories tall account for 44 percent of bird deaths. Skyscrapers come in at one percent.

The United States is home to “15.1 million low-rises and 122.9 million small residences, and only about 21,000 skyscrapers.” Overall, the black-throated blue warblers, ruby-throated hummingbirds, Anna’s hummingbirds, Townsend’s solitaires and golden-winged warblers are the most vulnerable species.

How You Can Help the Birds

If you care about the birds then there are a few ways that you can help at home or in the office. The Humane Society and Born Free USA have compiled a list of tips on how to prevent these bird collisions and what you can do if you encounter an injured bird.
 
First we are giving all of our money to the suspect classes, now we are giving our money to the birds, this country has gone to the birds, no wonder we are bankrupt with $19 trillion in actual debt, another $19 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities, and somewhere north of $70 trillion in hedge fund debt, maybe Russia and China are right, the American empire should be destroyed. It looks like with the collapse of the petro-dollar the BRICS can destroy us without firing a shot with the collapse of the American petro-dollar as the world's reserve currency, nothing has destroyed this country as much as Johnson's Civil Rights law that has squandered our wealth, all to buy votes, then Nixon's debasing of the currency taking us off the gold standard. Let's face it, the American empire has come closer to conquering the world than any other empire, as much as we try to lead Russia into war Vladimir Putin is just to smart to take the bait and is awaiting our self destruction.

"You Americans are so gullible. No, you won't accept Communism outright; but we'll keep feeding you small doses of Socialism until you will finally wake up and find that you already have Communism. We won't have to fight you; we'll so weaken your economy, until you fall like overripe fruit into our hands." Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev (April 17, 1894 – September 11, 1971)
 
Just hope they don't pass an avian rights law and start suing people for failing to put patterned covers over their patio doors.
 
Paul Sweet said:
Just hope they don't pass an avian rights law and start suing people for failing to put patterned covers over their patio doors.
As a future avian rights attorney, I must say I appreciate your avatar.

However, we will be lobbying for elevators on birdhouses to prevent the senseless accidental deaths of baby birds falling from the nest.

Owners of birdhouses without baby bird elevators will be prosecuted. I suggest you start implementing the new lifts immediately.
 
http://www.astm.org/WorkItems/WK47853.htm

[h=4]WK47853[/h]1. Scope

The purpose of this standard is to determine a material threat factor score (MTFS) for a sample material via a binomial choice protocol. Birds are given the perceived option of exiting a tunnel, either through a transparent, control pane or a test pane. The birds behaviors flying towards the test pane or avoiding the test pane determine the score.
 
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