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The Value of Parks to Birds along the Mississippi Flyway

Presentation by J. Devonshire, University of Missouri – St. Louis

J. Devonshire will share the results of a research project looking at the diversity and richness of birds in several restored and remnant parks in the Greater St. Louis Area. The data reflects the overwhelming importance of urban parks to birds along the Mississippi Flyway.

Waterfowl

Waterfowl at Clarence Cannon National Wildlife Refuge. photo courtesy of the US Fish & Wildlife Service.

Time and Place

Wednesday, February 8, 2017
7:00 pm

Big A's on the Riverfront
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Presentation by J. Devonshire, University of Missouri – St. Louis

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

6. p.m. Social Hour at Big A’s on the Riverfront
7:00 p.m. Presentation

At Big A’s on the Riverfront (in the back room)
308 N Main St. –  St Charles, MO
(directions below)

Presentation is FREE and open to the public!

Hosted by Greenway Network

The migratory corridor formed by the Mississippi River, its tributaries and other lakes and wetlands connected to them is called the Mississippi Flyway. Habitat along that path is REALLY important to birds moving through.

Development along our rivers in our urban areas creates little pockets, or islands, of habitat tucked in between pockets of development. The connectivity between these habitat islands begins to fragment.

UMSL PhD candidate J. Devonshire will share the results of a study she completed in 2011 with a team of researchers at the University of Missouri – St. Louis. They looked at the diversity and richness of birds in several restored and remnant parks in the Greater St. Louis Area. The data reflects the overwhelming importance of urban parks to birds along the Mississippi Flyway.

Flyways

The Mississippi and Atlantic Migratory Bird Flyways.

According to Devonshire:  “The best predictors of resident bird (i.e., breeding and wintering) species richness was park area and external developed area within 5 km, a surrogate for isolation. We suspect that the high species richness in parks in heavily urbanized areas is explained by the parks’ relatively large size and the funneling of species to two large parks within the most urbanized areas of St. Louis.”

“For migratory species, the best predictors were habitat diversity and developed area within the park. As development continues to transform natural habitat along important avian migratory flyways, urban planning that includes large, diverse natural areas within urbanized landscapes is key to conserving local and migratory avifauna diversity.”

Ms. Devonshire is a PhD candidate and instructor at the University of Missouri – St. Louis. Her doctoral research is in “Barriers in teaching environmental justice education”. She is also owner of Bike Stop Cafe, a restaurant, bike rental and service outpost in St. Charles, MO.

Directions

To Big A’s on the Riverfront, our host for the Speaker Series.

To get there from I-70

  • Take I-70 to exit 229B – the 5th St. Exit
  • Merge onto 5th St. headed north toward St. Charles.
  • After about 1 mile, turn right on Monroe St.
  • Turn left onto N. Main St.
  • Big A’s will be on your right (308 N. Main St.) Additional parking is available in the rear.
  • View on Google Maps.

Resources and Links

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The Big Muddy Speakers Series in St. Charles

is hosted by these wonderful partners:

All speakers are presenting for free and Big A’s is sharing the space for free! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with all of us!

The Big Muddy Speaker Series also takes place monthly in Rocheport and Kansas City.

A special thank you to Greg Poleski and Mike Garvey of Greenway Network for making this happen!