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Crows prove far too cagey to be thwarted in Illinois town

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(MCT) — DANVILLE, Ill. — In this Vermilion County town known for having what just might be North America’s largest winter crow roost, there are half the number of black birds there were a year ago.

That said, when the tallying was done at the annual Middlefork River Valley Christmas Bird Count on Jan. 1, the crows still outnumbered the humans nearly 4-to-1.

This season, more than 100,000 crows have roosted here at night, in the trees and on the rooftops, eaves, awnings, fence posts, parking garage, traffic lights and telephone wires. And folks in this town 35 miles east of Champaign don’t like to — what’s the word? — crow about it.

There are no souvenir shirts to advertise this “Crow Capital” claim to fame, but through the years, there have been plenty of sidewalks and store awnings splattered with droppings, residents complaining of being bombarded, and a whole lot of people who get increasingly tired of stepping around “it.”

“It is the largest winter roost of crows that we know about in the U.S. and Canada,” said Steve Bailey, of Mundelein, an ornithologist with the Illinois Natural History Survey.

Danville-area volunteers led by Bailey counted 121,500 crows during the bird census on New Year’s Day. A year ago, the count was 238,000. In the winter of 1999-2000, there were 267,000, the highest number recorded.

The numbers fluctuate from year to year, and the recent numbers aren’t unusually low, but the reasons for the decline over the past 12 months weren’t hard to determine: West Nile virus and drought.

Crows and blue jays are the birds most vulnerable to the mosquito-borne West Nile, and the drought not only cut down on the seed, nuts and berries available for wildlife, but it caused a big resurgence of West Nile, said Mike Ward, professor of wildlife ecology for the Natural History Survey at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “West Nile thrives in hot, dry weather,” he said.

Despite their vulnerability, crows seem to “rebound very well” from West Nile, Bailey said. That might not be good news to the humans in this town of 33,000, whose past attempts to keep the birds away have mostly proved fruitless.

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