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Tuesday, January 14, 2025

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Special Counsel report: Trump would have been convicted in election case; Dangerous winds return to Los Angeles area, threatening to fan deadly flames; Georgia church creates solar-powered emergency hub with federal climate funds; Environmental groups call for vinyl chloride ban; Tipped wages to be phased out in MI next month, but not without a fight.

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Republicans want to attach 'strings' to California fire aid, a judge clears the release of findings about Trump election interference, and North Carolina Republicans seek to invalidate tens of thousands of votes in the state's Supreme Court race.

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"Drill, baby, drill" is a tough sell for oil and gas companies in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, rising sea levels create struggles for Washington's coastal communities, and more folks than ever are taking advantage of America's great outdoors.

Art, science unite in FL to prevent birds hitting windows

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Friday, January 10, 2025   

With a thud, the tranquil sounds of nature are shattered as a bird crashes into a glass window. It's an all-too-common, deadly occurrence that students at one Florida university are working to minimize.

The reflective surfaces of buildings trick birds into thinking they're flying toward the open sky or trees, only to meet a fatal impact. These strikes are responsible for millions of bird deaths every year, and at Florida Gulf Coast University, students and faculty are taking creative steps to tackle this silent crisis.

FGCU ornithology professor Oscar Johnson said bird-window strikes are a major threat to wild bird populations.

"Some studies estimate as many as 1 billion birds die every single year, just in the United States, due to collisions with windows," he said."It's a major problem - obviously is a global problem, it's a national problem, it really happens anywhere. So, anywhere that you live, I guarantee that this is something that needs to be worked on."

So, the school's Ornithology Club teamed up with campus art galleries to create an art installation that deters birds from flying into reflective glass. The design uses repeated patterns of dots or lines to break up reflections, which prevent birds from mistaking the glass for an open sky. The project combines science and art to reduce fatal collisions.

The installation covers a large window at the campus art gallery entrance and features line drawings of local bird species. Johnson said the project aims to expand across campus and beyond, with plans to make the designs publicly available for homeowners and businesses.

"The drawings that we did, we're going to be producing them and depositing them on the FGCU website, where they'll be downloadable," he said. "You just print them out on a piece of paper, put them up against the glass, and you can trace the drawing on the outside of the glass. It is important to have something on the exterior, in order to break up the reflection."

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service also recommends similar tips to curb the problem. Johnson encouraged communities to take proactive steps to protect birds from these avoidable incidents.

Disclosure: Florida Gulf Coast University contributes to our fund for reporting. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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