The impact of climate change is not lost on humans, but how are our feathered friends navigating these fluctuations?

"There's this very close relationship between where birds are when on the planet and what's happening with the climate and what's happening with weather, right?" Andrew Farnsworth, a migration ecologist and a visiting scientist at Cornell University, said.

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When we look at that relationship, we have to take a look at the weather and climate on a global scale.

"A lot of that connects to what's going on in the arctic, what's going on in the Boreal forests, where there are wildfires, where there are challenges that birds are facing," Farnsworth said.

Bird watchers from a local level notice this, too. Ea

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