How Makeshift Stereos Could Help an Endangered Warbler Find a New Home

A unique experiment aims to lure Kirtland's Warblers to habitat hundreds of miles away from their typical haunts. It's working better than expected.

Somewhere in a thawing field in far northern Wisconsin, the song of a Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler bursts from a clump of young pine trees and echoes through the crisp spring sky. If luck prevails and the winds are favorable, there鈥檚 a chance another rare bird passing through might hear the  and decide to stay for a while.

But back in the stand of trees, nary a warbler can be found. Instead, there鈥檚 an MP3 player hooked up to a plastic Rubbermaid bin, holding a hefty battery. This setup is the handiwork of researchers trying to get the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler to expand its territory in Wisconsin.

Since 2014, Nick Anich, a biologist from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources,  in terrain suited to the warbler鈥檚 finicky tastes. The half-ounce songbird nests almost exclusively in the scrubby jack pine stands found in northern Michigan, a landscape that declined sharply in the 20th century from human disturbances and drastically reduced the bird鈥檚 population. Similar habitat exists in Wisconsin, but the birds have to find it first. That鈥檚 where the artificial acoustics come in.

The boxes blast a recording of the Kirtland鈥檚 voice, mostly the stuttering song of an aggressive male. The idea is to use these playbacks to provide social cues to warblers as they fly through, suggesting that there are other birds of their kind nearby. That in turn tells them there鈥檚 suitable nesting habitat. 鈥淭his just anchors them and says: 鈥楬ey, everybody, this is the party,鈥 鈥 Anich explains.

Kirtland鈥檚 Warblers have a small established territory in Adams County in southern Wisconsin, but they periodically surface elsewhere in the state鈥攕ometimes as much as 200 miles away. Biologists say they might overshoot their usual nesting sites as they migrate north from their wintering grounds in the Bahamas. Or it may be that the birds roam intentionally to seek out pine patches that spring from the ashes of forest fires.

Regardless of the circumstances, getting more birds to nest in Wisconsin would back up the broader Kirtland鈥檚 recovery efforts. The species was reduced to  by the early 1970s, largely due to fire suppression and nest parasitism from Brown-headed Cowbirds. But decades of conservation measures have reversed the trend in Michigan, where wildlife managers have been working to create new habitat and trap cowbirds. With the population now estimated at more than 4,000 individuals, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  the species鈥 endangered status鈥攁nd the protections that go with it.

The final decision is expected within a year, but even if the bird鈥檚 status is downgraded, the work by conservationists is far from over. Nonprofits and government agencies will need to continue burning or harvesting old forests to make way for young jack pines. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something that鈥檚 going to be maintained without a lot of effort or a lot of people on the ground,鈥 says Stephanie Beilke, the conservation science associate at .

Even with intensive management, however, the bird鈥檚 range will be limited, and that carries its own risks. 鈥淚f a large fire or insect outbreak tore through the handful of Michigan counties that have 95 percent of the population, we could be in big trouble," Anich says, "unless we had other sites where the species is breeding."

Which is why it鈥檚 important to establish an alternate hideout. So far, biologists in Wisconsin have been encouraged by the preliminary success of the playbacks. When they started the project in 2014, they found a single male Kirtland鈥檚 in the two counties they鈥檇 scoped out for habitat. By 2016, the count was up to seven adults and 10 fledged young.

Map of Kirtland's Warbler breeding locations. The diamond marks the main population; circles mark small subpopulations; and pins mark the two prospective populations that are being established through playbacks.

The results, while limited, have been somewhat astonishing. Given that male Kirtland鈥檚 are territorial, their songs can be taken as threats, not lures. But Anich and his peers decided to forge on with the playbacks after seeing their effect on another endangered songbird. In 2001, University of Illinois ornithologist Mike Ward, who鈥檚 partnering with Anich as well, adopted the same methods outside of Fort Hood in Texas. In Ward鈥檚 case, though, he needed to coax the birds over a relatively small range鈥30 miles or fewer. For the Kirtland鈥檚 Warblers, the playback ploy is pushed to its limits; the Wisconsin sites are 340 miles from the bird鈥檚 core range in Michigan.

And yet the project is showing potential. Anich estimates there鈥檚 enough suitable habitat in the state to support another 250 breeding pairs, or 10 percent of the global Kirtland鈥檚 population. What鈥檚 more, the land where Anich鈥檚 work is taking place is public, which makes it easier to maintain for wildlife purposes.

Bayfield County, along the far northern border of Wisconsin, is one of the sites that鈥檚 shown the most promise. The reason is two-fold: It doesn鈥檛 have an abundance of Brown-headed Cowbirds, and forestry officials have already begun a 48-year rotational cycle of harvesting timber stands for Kirtland鈥檚 Warblers and other birds like Sharp-tailed Grouse.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take quite a few years to get this all in place, to get it to rotate like we want it to,鈥 says Andrew O'Krueg, a forester at the Bayfield County Forestry and Parks Department. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e planning to do this for forever.鈥 That shouldn鈥檛 be the case with Anich鈥檚 project. At another site in Marinette County, he鈥檚 already removed the playback boxes because enough warblers have settled in to sustain a local population. All that鈥檚 left to do now, Anich says, is grow the pines until it鈥檚 time to burn it all down to the ground.