Miranda Zammarelli hikes into the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in central New Hampshire, pausing when she sees a tree with a pink ribbon wrapped around its trunk.
Zammarelli, a behavioral ecologist and PhD candidate at Dartmouth College, knows that ribbon well. It marks the corner of a 25-acre field site first established in 1969 to map the territories of the songbirds inhabiting it.
Her task now is simply to wander, wait and listen.
Artificial light has essentially lengthened birds’ day
Millions of audio recordings of hundreds of bird species have revealed that artificial light is making the birds wake up earlier and go to bed later.
On this early morning in June, it doesn’t take long before a soft melody wafts down from the treetops. “That’s a black-throated blue warbler,