Storks Are Skipping Migration to Stay Home and Eat Garbage

It鈥檚 hard to blame the birds for choosing junk food in human cities and landfills over thousand-kilometer flights. But will it hurt them in the long run?

As beautiful as migration may be to watch, the impulse behind it is entirely practical鈥攕pecies are searching for better sources of winter food. But what if they could find food even when the weather turns cold?

That鈥檚 the conundrum facing the White Stork, a gorgeous white bird that typically trades in its summer digs in Europe for winters in southern Africa. In recent years, more and more White Storks are choosing to stay closer to home and scrounge for easy pickings in landfills and fish farms.

鈥淭he stork is always thought of as a nice clean bird, and then they spend the winter eating garbage,鈥 says ornithologist of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Germany, whose research tracking White Stork migrations was published last week in Science Advances. 鈥淚t changes the image I would say.鈥

Flack and her colleagues didn鈥檛 set out to document filthy stork behavior. They were after something much simpler鈥攖o compare the migration routes of storks throughout Europe. To do so, they strapped satellite tags, capable of transmitting the birds鈥 geolocations, onto 70 juvenile storks before they left their nests. They also wanted to know how much energy each route takes. Since there鈥檚 no calorimeter to measure energy use in birds, the researchers used the next best thing: acceleration sensors built into the tags that, like the one in your smart phone, measure orientation and movement speed, which can then be converted into energy used.

Which Storks Stay, and Which Storks Go

The tags revealed that White Storks from Europe follow three migration strategies. One group included traditional migrants from Russia, Poland, and Greece that flew past the Sahara Desert to the African savannah, travelling an average distance of 16,500 kilometers, munching on their normal southern food sources. The second group (including storks from Spain, Tunisia, and southwest Germany) migrated south nearly 5,000 kilometers to northern Africa鈥攁nd feasted on human scraps in landfills, cities and towns, and farms.  And the third group stayed local: Armenian storks flew less than 1,000 km to the Persian Gulf, while Uzbek storks hardly strayed more than 100 kilometers from home. The researchers suspect that these birds ate food that humans fed directly to the storks, or perhaps found food sources from fish farms in the area.

Flack was surprised to find that all of the storks required similar amounts of energy to migrate and feed throughout the winter, regardless of how far they flew. The birds that went the farthest actually spent less energy migrating鈥攕urfing the breeze pays off energetically鈥攂ut they had to work hard to hunt for food once they arrived at their hunting grounds. The birds that remained closer to home faced treacherous winter flying conditions that burned a lot of energy, and they compensated for this by expending minimal energy digging through human leftovers.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a further demonstration of the fact that although migration is an astonishing and complex phenomenon, for an awful lot of birds it鈥檚 also quite malleable,鈥 says ecologist of Princeton University, who and was not involved in the research. He notes instances where birds have changed their migratory routes to more closely follow birdfeeders, or to avoid treacherous conditions created by climate change, and others that invented new routes after being introduced to new areas.

鈥淚t gives cause for a little bit of optimism that animals will find a way to adjust their migrations to climate change,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut on the other hand, you can鈥檛 get too complacent about it because we don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 going to be true for most birds.鈥

How Does Trash Stack Up, Nutritionally?

But one important question remains: Is it healthy for storks to eat trash?

Unfortunately, this study can鈥檛 give us a definitive answer on that. On the one hand, their attraction to landfills could be a beneficial adaptation, as the birds take advantage of novel food sources created by people. On the other, feeding among sometimes-toxic refuse could kill individual birds or affect their fertility.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of organic waste on these sites, and some animals can live quite well off of this,鈥 says Flack. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also quite dangerous; you eat the wrong thing and you鈥檙e dead. We don鈥檛 know what it does to the storks in the long term.鈥

Additionally, these human interventions could disrupt reliable migratory routes in the long-term, with unknown results. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know in general whether it鈥檚 a bad thing to shorten their migrations,鈥 says Flack.

Rest assured that Flack and her colleagues are on the case. She鈥檚 now looking into how the storks learn and adjust their routes鈥攈ow much of migration is innate, how much is learned, and how much is improvised.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really in a golden age for studying animal migrations and it鈥檚 only going to get better,鈥 says Wilcove. 鈥淲e can really begin to answer questions that people have been puzzling about for centuries.鈥