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Look up at the night sky over the next few weeks and you might catch a glimpse of an avian superhighway.
Millions of migratory birds are making their seasonal flights over Texas, with peak southern migration occurring from Oct. 14 to Nov. 17, according to the Texas Conservation Alliance.
To help ensure their safe passage, Texans are encouraged to dim their lights as part of “Lights Out, Texas!”
The biannual campaign was launched as a statewide effort in 2020 by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and BirdCast, a project that uses machine learning to help scientists predict how birds migrate based on weather patterns. That launch came a year after a study found Dallas to be the third most dangerous city in the United States for avian migration.
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Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson’s office has partnered with the campaign and local businesses starting in 2020 to reduce light pollution during the fall and spring migration seasons. Downtown skyscrapers such as Whitacre Tower, one of AT&T’s corporate headquarters, and Reunion Tower have participated in the effort.
Nearly 80% of all North American birds migrate every spring and fall and around 70% of those birds are nocturnal travelers. The greatest obstacle during migration is light pollution, especially artificial light from urban areas, says Tania Homayoun, an ornithologist at Texas Parks and Wildlife. Scientists aren’t sure why that’s the case, but some research suggests that light pollution acts as an ecological trap, luring and throwing birds off course. Reflective glass on buildings like those in downtown Dallas and other city centers can further disorient a bird’s senses.
Birds don’t see glass as humans do, Homayoun says. “The cues that tell us that there is likely to be a window there or a glass door, birds don’t innately have those cues. … Sometimes they don’t see the glass or sometimes they see what they think is a reflection of trees and the sky that they can fly into.”
Some estimates suggest that anywhere from 388 million to 965 million birds die annually in the United States from building collisions. That comes out to about 12 to 30 deaths per second. As light pollution in North America grows by up to 10% annually, the number of fatalities could increase.
In 2017, Nashville and Blackburnian warblers were among the 20 species of migratory birds that died after colliding with a 32-story skyscraper in downtown Galveston. In 2023, nearly 1,000 migratory songbirds died after crashing into a mostly glass convention center in Chicago. Songbirds tend to fly at a lower altitude than other birds, Homayoun says, putting them at a greater risk of being drawn off course.
In downtown Dallas, the 37-story Whitacre Tower is dimming its exterior lights by 50% each night through Oct. 29 from 6 to 11 p.m. , AT&T spokesman Matthew Lawson said in an email. The building will completely turn off its exterior lights from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. and then turn them back on at 50% brightness from 6 to 8 a.m.
Reunion Tower, the 50-story observation tower in downtown, is following a similar schedule from Oct. 14 to Nov. 17, according to spokeswoman Jenna Guinn.
“Although our lights and light shows make us the icon of Dallas, we are more than happy to continue to participate in this [initiative] and help out our city in any way possible,” Guinn said in an email earlier this year.
“I’m sure every bit helps our feathered friends!”
It’s hard to gauge how dimming lights during migration season has helped birds in Texas because there’s not enough historical data to analyze, Homayoun says. But studies of efforts elsewhere have shown promising signs. A 2021 study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that darkening windows of a large urban building in Chicago reduced bird collisions by 60% over a 20-year period. In Portland, Ore., the number of birds colliding into a governmental building dropped by 94% over a one-year period after the building’s glass windows were retrofitted with bird-safe film to reduce reflectivity.
On the iNaturalist app, volunteers can help monitor bird collisions and deaths by reporting their observations or taking photos, Homayoun says. And BirdCast’s live migration tracker allows users to follow the sojourn of migratory birds.
D-FW residents can also get involved in local “Lights Out, Texas” monitoring surveys, which involve going around downtown Dallas or Fort Worth to look for birds that have collided into buildings. Data collected from these surveys has been used to better understand migratory birds’ health and ecology, such as the prevalence of microplastics in their diet or of infectious diseases like avian malaria and avian influenza, according to the Texas Conservation Alliance’s “Lights Out, Dallas” website.
Miriam Fauzia is a science reporting fellow at The Dallas Morning News. Her fellowship is supported by the University of Texas at Dallas. The News makes all editorial decisions.