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Study examining birds’ habitat on Lake Michigan in full flight

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The plane flies about 110 yards above the water and at about 100 mph. The survey blocks are rectangles about 20 miles long and cover the area from 1 to 10 miles offshore.

The study area stretches from the waters off northern Illinois to Door County.

Mueller recruited a team of counters to assist with the work, including Seth Cutright of West Bend, Tom Schultz of Green Lake, Joel Trick of Green Bay and Andrew Limmer of Milwaukee.

Funding for the project has come from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and from the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.

The work is focused from November to May. The project is now completing its third year of counts.

Limmer, a recent graduate of UWM, devised a special survey of waterfowl hunters last fall and used the work as part of an academic project.

Other than the researchers, waterfowl hunters are the only other group to venture offshore in search of ducks in fall and winter.

On a typical day, the aircraft flies two 20-mile survey blocks.

As birds are counted, GPS coordinates are entered.

What has the work shown?

The most commonly observed species is the long-tailed duck (formerly known as old squaw). Over the most recent survey year, the researchers recorded 32,714 longtails, followed by 20,538 red-breasted mergansers, 6,946 common goldeneyes, 1,447 buffleheads and 1,036 canvabacks.

Long-tailed ducks are sometimes called the “deep-diving champions” of North America. The birds feed on organisms found on the lake’s bottom and have been documented diving over 200 feet.

Unique to ducks, the longtail flaps its wings to propel itself as it dives, Mueller said.

The birds breed in the far north and migrate to the Great Lakes in winter. In recent decades the longtails’ favored food in Lake Michigan, a zooplankton called Diporeia, has largely vanished.

Long-tailed ducks now feed on the zebra and quagga mussels that carpet the lake’s bottom. The long-term impacts of the diet shift are unknown. Overall, long-tailed ducks have declined 50 percent in the last 30 years. The species is listed as “vulnerable.”

Such changes in bird numbers highlight the importance of the project.

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