Never mind the specific stuff about US funding cuts. People like me and the author here are more and more worried about the sharp declines in song bird numbers. He explains why.
Logan Clark
Logan grew up in Northern Michigan where he fell in…
So when I hear folks dismiss songbirds as “tweety birds”—a harmless jab common among hunters—I get it. Most of them don’t flush, don’t hold, and don’t make the dinner table. But what many of us miss is that these little birds are sounding the alarm about something that’s coming for all of us who care about wildlife and wild places.
Over the past decade, I’ve bounced around the country conducting bird research. I just wrapped up a master’s degree studying dusky and ruffed grouse, and I’m now beginning a PhD focused on migrating songbirds. That experience gives me a front-row seat to the damage these proposed and ongoing federal cuts are already causing. I have a clear view of how much worse things could get for bird conservation and research if they continue.
It was quite the spectacle to see the hunting community at large rally against the proposed landgrabs in earlier versions of the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” I’m here to tell you that remaining proposed agency cuts, especially to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), are just as existential.
Unlike agencies that manage land or enforce regulations, USGS exists solely to provide unbiased science. Although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) still oversees and enforces banding permits, it’s USGS that maintains the records, analyzes the data, and supports the science behind bird banding and breeding bird surveys.
LISTEN: The Mystery of Grouse Drumming – The Project Upland Podcast
Behind the curtains, USGS biologists and data managers coordinateh tese routes, maintain the database, and model trends for more than 400 bird species. Their work is essential to transforming raw bird counts into usable information.
USGS also supports a broad network of wildlife research through its Cooperative Research Units (CRUs), regional science centers, and dedicated recovery work for threatened species. The CRU program, which includes 43 units across 41 states, partners USGS scientists with universities and state agencies to train emerging wildlife PhD researchers while tackling conservation issues.
At the Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center in North Dakota, USGS biologists conduct long-term studies on grassland birds, pollinators, wetland ecosystems, invasive species, and piping plovers, producing data that informs habitat restoration across the Great Plains. USGS also houses the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team at its Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, where scientists have tracked grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone and Glacier ecosystems for decades to support recovery and management planning.
Beyond threatened and invasive species, USGS researchers play a leading role in wildlife disease monitoring, studying the effects and spread of West Nile virus, avian botulism, and highly pathogenic avian influenza in both game and non-game birds. The agency also leads efforts to map and model mule deer, elk, and pronghorn migrations across the West, having documented nearly 200 major corridors in collaboration with states and tribes. These maps now guide land-use planning, highway mitigation, and conservation policy for some of the most iconic big game herds in North America.
Why Losing Funding for Songbird Science Would Hurt All Bird Species
August 4, 2025

Logan Clark
Logan grew up in Northern Michigan where he fell in…
Budget cuts and layoffs threaten “tweety bird” research. Here’s why upland hunters should care.
When I go bird hunting, I sling binoculars and a camera over my vest and carry a shotgun in my hand. Similarly, I keep a spotting scope in the backseat of my truck, just in case. Birdwatching and bird hunting are equal parts of who I am, and bird research is what I do for a living.So when I hear folks dismiss songbirds as “tweety birds”—a harmless jab common among hunters—I get it. Most of them don’t flush, don’t hold, and don’t make the dinner table. But what many of us miss is that these little birds are sounding the alarm about something that’s coming for all of us who care about wildlife and wild places.
Over the past decade, I’ve bounced around the country conducting bird research. I just wrapped up a master’s degree studying dusky and ruffed grouse, and I’m now beginning a PhD focused on migrating songbirds. That experience gives me a front-row seat to the damage these proposed and ongoing federal cuts are already causing. I have a clear view of how much worse things could get for bird conservation and research if they continue.
It was quite the spectacle to see the hunting community at large rally against the proposed landgrabs in earlier versions of the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” I’m here to tell you that remaining proposed agency cuts, especially to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), are just as existential.
USGS: The Unsung Backbone of U.S. Wildlife Science
Although USGS was originally created to chart the terrain of the western United States in the 1800s, over the years, the agency has expanded its scope well beyond geology. As ecology emerged as a vital scientific field and public land management became more complex, Congress added biological research to the agency’s responsibilities.Unlike agencies that manage land or enforce regulations, USGS exists solely to provide unbiased science. Although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) still oversees and enforces banding permits, it’s USGS that maintains the records, analyzes the data, and supports the science behind bird banding and breeding bird surveys.
The Bird Banding Lab
Most of us are familiar with migratory gamebird banding and probably know someone who has harvested a banded duck or woodcock. These efforts are coordinated through the USGS Bird Banding Lab (BBL), one of many wildlife-focused programs housed within the agency’s Ecosystems Mission Area (EMA). The BBL issues about one million bird bands each year and has distributed over 79 million bands across North America since 1920, supporting both U.S. and Canadian banding efforts. To date, the lab has recorded roughly 6.5 million band encounters, including harvest recoveries and resightings. It’s one of the most important long-term wildlife datasets on the continent.
The Breeding Bird Survey
The second cornerstone of USGS bird science is the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS), a massive citizen science effort that has quietly shaped how we understand bird populations for sixty years. Conducted annually since the 1960s, the program now includes around 3,500 active routes across the U.S. and Canada. Each route spans 25 miles and includes 50 roadside stops, where trained volunteers and wildlife professionals record every bird seen or heard during a three-minute count.LISTEN: The Mystery of Grouse Drumming – The Project Upland Podcast
Behind the curtains, USGS biologists and data managers coordinateh tese routes, maintain the database, and model trends for more than 400 bird species. Their work is essential to transforming raw bird counts into usable information.
Bird Data Collected By USGS Supports Broader Wildlife Research
Because of this effort, we now have clear evidence that many songbird species like wood thrushes, meadowlarks, and all swallows have declined significantly, while waterfowl and wetland birds have increased in response to wetland protections and conservation policies of the 1980s and 1990s. More than 700 peer-reviewed publications have used BBS data, and it plays a growing role in the management of several migratory game birds by providing long-term, regional population trends that help guide harvest decisions. It is now the primary monitoring tool for mourning doves and band-tailed pigeons. In fact, BBS data have replaced older surveys like the Mourning Dove Call-Count Survey due to broader coverage and stronger statistical performance. Recent studies have also used BBS data in combination with other survey methods to refine wood duck population estimates, especially in high-use regions like the Atlantic Flyway.USGS also supports a broad network of wildlife research through its Cooperative Research Units (CRUs), regional science centers, and dedicated recovery work for threatened species. The CRU program, which includes 43 units across 41 states, partners USGS scientists with universities and state agencies to train emerging wildlife PhD researchers while tackling conservation issues.
At the Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center in North Dakota, USGS biologists conduct long-term studies on grassland birds, pollinators, wetland ecosystems, invasive species, and piping plovers, producing data that informs habitat restoration across the Great Plains. USGS also houses the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team at its Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, where scientists have tracked grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone and Glacier ecosystems for decades to support recovery and management planning.
Beyond threatened and invasive species, USGS researchers play a leading role in wildlife disease monitoring, studying the effects and spread of West Nile virus, avian botulism, and highly pathogenic avian influenza in both game and non-game birds. The agency also leads efforts to map and model mule deer, elk, and pronghorn migrations across the West, having documented nearly 200 major corridors in collaboration with states and tribes. These maps now guide land-use planning, highway mitigation, and conservation policy for some of the most iconic big game herds in North America.
