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Posted Tue Mar 3 2009: from KSU, via EurekAlert:
Birds in Flint Hills of Kansas, Oklahoma face population decline despite large habitat http://apocadocs.com/s.pl?1236102836
"Because of its size, the Flint Hills is assumed to be a population stronghold for grassland birds," said Kimberly With, a K-State associate professor of biology who led the study. "Mostly this has been based on bird counts, but they can be misleading because they don't show what the region is capable of producing. Birds are very mobile and thus birds could come from elsewhere to give the appearance of a stable population year after year. This is especially true if the region attracts birds because of its size, but birds do not breed successfully once they settle here."... They conducted a two-year study of regional viability of three grassland birds: the dickcissel, grasshopper sparrow and eastern meadowlark. With and her colleagues found that none of these bird species is viable in the 4 million-acre Flint Hills region. They estimated population declines of as much as 29 percent per year during the years studied.
[Read more stories about: bird collapse, ecosystem interrelationships]

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We've put the grassland to productive use -- who needs a few more birds, anyway?

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