A blog post was written about bird-window collisions on campus, highlighting the project’s monitoring efforts and organizer Madi Chudzik’s research on collisions and nocturnal flight calls.
Read the article here
A blog post was written about bird-window collisions on campus, highlighting the project’s monitoring efforts and organizer Madi Chudzik’s research on collisions and nocturnal flight calls.
Read the article here
Team leader and first author on our PeerJ bird-window collision paper Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela was interviewed for PeerJ’s blog about our recent paper. Read the complete story here!
Team leaders Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela and Scott Winton recently authored an article for the NC Wildlifer, the magazine for the NC chapter of The Wildlife Society. The article describes results and mitigation strategies used by our team at Duke University to reduce collisions. Read the complete article here!
A new scientific paper written by our bird-window collisions team at Duke came out on PeerJ on February first. This article described results from carcass surveys in Spring and Fall 2014, and Spring 2015, and describes the process towards mitigation on the deadliest building. It’s open access, so please share!
Read the article here!
DukEnvironment is a bi-annual magazine that publishes articles about research conducted by Nicholas School of the Environment faculty and students, at Duke University. In this Fall’s issue, our leaders Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela and Scott Winton are featured in the “Student News” section. You can read more about our bird-window collision project and the people involved in this article.
Read the full story here! (scroll down to page 25)
Duke University news just released a video about our project and the dotted pattern installed in CIEMAS to prevent bird-window collisions. We are very proud! Check it out!
You are now all aware of the fact that the deadliest building on Duke’s campus is deadly no more! CIEMAS has gone bird friendly and the local news are all over it celebrating this wonderful action. The full story will come out on September 17th when Duke’s administration presents the bird friendly pattern on CIEMAS, for now here’s this news piece.
Read more and watch the video here!
We all know that architects don’t put lots of glass in buildings intending to kill birds. No, they put there so people inside the building enjoy natural light and beautiful views. So the architects are not to blame, they all mean well and want us happy. However, large amounts of glass take millions of collisions each year, at Duke, one building especially: CIEMAS. The News & Observer, after doing a story about our bird-window collision project, proceeded to write a nice opinion piece on the subject.
Read the article here!
Sometimes architects and project managers argue that renovations to make a building bird friendly are expensive, and don’t give an added benefit to the structures. Well…think again! After a half-billion 5-year renovation, the Javits Center has bird friendly glass that has also reduced energy consumption by 26%. A dotted patter, just like the one installed at Duke’s CIEMAS, has reduced bird collisions by 90%.
This is a great example of a large scale renovation that yields benefits for all. Plus this building now has a green roof with nesting gulls, geese, and (soon) kestrels!
Read the complete New York Times article here!