So many birds are in the sky at Ontario's Long Point right now, they're showing up on radar - Action News
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So many birds are in the sky at Ontario's Long Point right now, they're showing up on radar

There were so many birds in the skies above Ontario's Long Point peninsula on Sunday morning that they appeared as a massive doughnut on American weather radar in Buffalo, N.Y.

Radar images show what experts believe to be swallows in the hundreds of thousands, a sign of migration

A graphic with a circular image.
A National Weather Service image taken at a U.S. radar station in Buffalo, N.Y., on Sunday shows what looks like a giant doughnut over Long Point in Ontario. Bird experts say the ring is actually made up of up to 500,000 swallows congregating in the marshes. (Twitter)

There were so many birds flying over Ontario's Long Point peninsula on Sundaythat they appeared as a massive doughnut on American weather radar in Buffalo, N.Y.

The image has been captured and shared widely on social media a sign ofthe annual southward migration of millions of birds that's in full swing across Canadaas the arrival of shorter days and cooler temperatures signals them to take flight in search of sunnier weather farto the south.

The phenomenon is called a "roost ring." The U.S. National Weather Service describes it as"when the radar beam detects thousands of birds taking off from their roosting sites around dawn to forage for insects."

The image was posted to social media by meteorologist Corey Elder, who told CBC News by emailthat, while it is common to see roost rings, it's rare to see "such a perfect concentric ring."

While most people have never seen one,professional weather watchers see it quite often, according to Jim Mitchell, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),across Lake Eriein Buffalo,who works at the radar station that captured the image.

Long Point is a UNESCO biosphere reserve

"The birds are all roosted together, and obviously when they take off, they have to spread out. It looks like a ring when they fly away, and there's so many of them, it shows up," Mitchell said.

Mitchell said the radar station in Buffalo is so sensitive, it picks up cars on the nearbyfreeway andflocks of seagulls scouring trash heaps at a dump south of the city.But the size and scale of the bird swarmsat Long Point are so massive and dense, it registers on radar even though Buffalo is167 kilometres away, he said.

"Long Point, that's the most pronounced one we see."

It's because Long Pointisthelargest freshwater sand spit in the world, andone of the most important areas for migratory birds in North America.

A bird.
Bank swallows such as this one are believed to be among the birds forming the roost ring in the sky at Long Point. (David M. Bell/Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology)

This sandy,narrow and uninhabited peninsulaextends 40 kilometres into Lake Erie. It'sso unique and rich in species at risk,it's been recognized as a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve.

"With it, is probably the largest wetland, if not, the largest wetland in the entire Great Lakes," said Stuart Mackenzie. As director of strategic assets for the non-profit Birds Canada, it's his job to manage the Long Point Bird Observatory and the field work that goes on there.

Swarm islikely swallows or purple martins

Mackenzie said that, given the size of the roost ring and the time of year, it's likely that barn swallows, bank swallows or purple martins, or a combination, were the birds swarming in the hundreds of thousands, roosting, moulting and fattening up for the journey on plentifulinsects.

A purple bird.
Male purple martins are an iridescent purple colour all over. (Image supplied by Jonathan Kells)

"Why it's so attractive to swallows is because of those protected wetlands;they give them a safe place to roost at night and huge quantities of food for them to forage on during the day."

The swarm is likely from across most of southern Ontario, maybe even further afield, and the birdscongregate at Long Point to roost at night, Mackenzie said. When dawn breaks, they leave in such large numbers that radar stations can detect them more than 100 kilometres away.

"The low end, in terms of the size of the roost, is about a hundred thousand swallows on any given night and, on the high end, it's well north of half a million.

"On radar, it gives sort of that doughnut signature, with the centre of that doughnut being the roost location as the birds disperse from the site in all directions," Mackenzie said.

He said the phenomenon happens for a couple of weeks, and then one day, the birds decide they're offand they fly to the southern United States or South America for the winter.

Before they go, however, Mackenzie said, to be there on the ground and see the birds congregate for yourselfis a sight to behold.

"It happens very close to sunset when they begin to roost. They begin to swarm, and mix up and spend about a half-hour or 45 minutes cavorting over the wetlands moving in these large swarms.

"It's almost like a tornado or a vortex.Those swarms circle and circle, and then this vortex goes down in to the marsh, and that's when the birds peel off," Mackenzie said.

When we didn't have this technology, they probably blocked out radar. It's hard to tell.- Stuart Mackenzie, Birds Canada

"Itseems to be in this co-ordinated fashion, and they will eventually descend into the wetlands and disappear."

It's something the birds have been doing for thousands of years, and yet we have only relatively recently possessed the technology to see it on a large scale at Long Point and similar sites, such as Walpole Island or less frequently at Point Pelee.

"For me, it's a humbling experience," Mackenzie said of seeing birds whose populations have declined by 50 per cent in the last 40 yearscongregate in the hundreds of thousands.

"There's half a million now. It's phenomenal. What was it like 50 years ago? When we didn't have this technology, they probably blocked out radar. It's hard to tell."