Investigating humanity's ecological impact at Flat Iron Lake
The student researchers walked out of the woods into a power line clearing full of tall grass and wildflowers. It stretched from the road towards and past them, the lines running over a series of ridges until they passed out of sight.
Following a path up one of the ridges, James Eapen, a junior studying biology at Calvin, pointed out the bird boxes they were there to check. The boxes resembled regular unadorned wooden bird houses, but Eapen and Gabriela Pineda—also a junior studying biology—had explained earlier how they were fitted with sensors to track bird traffic.
As they approached the boxes, what seemed like the sound of a distant highway got increasingly louder, and Eapen pointed out a fake rock with a speaker connected to a pole-mounted solar panel apparatus. “That’s our noise generator,” he said, “it’s got the timer set to come on for six hours each morning.”
He then opened the box, revealing the nestling blue birds resting within, who were only two weeks old.
Over the next 15 minutes, Pineda and Eapen spread out their equipment in front of the box and carefully removed the young birds one by one, taking blood samples and a variety of measurements—wing length, lower leg length, and mass—before gently replacing them. Throughout, the nestlings remained still which Pineda noted was not always the case.
Diagnosing Creation
Pineda and Eapen have spent their summer living at Calvin’s Flat Iron Lake Nature Preserve, serving as groundskeepers while conducting two simultaneous research projects.
The one described above, with biology professor Darren Proppe, intends to evaluate the impact of human noise pollution on bluebird reproduction, health, feeding, survivorship, and nest selection. The other, with biology professor Dave Warners, tracks prairie plant’s flowering times at the Flat Iron Lake Nature Preserve to determine if and how climate change has affected each species’ flowering periods, as a shift in these periods could endanger each population's reproductive relationship with local pollinators.
“To get an idea of which plants are most at risk for something like this to happen, we need a long-term data set that allows us to tease out variability caused by weather, so we can truly evaluate the longer term effects of climate change,” said Warners. “That’s what we’re doing at Flat Iron Lake.”
Each day, Eapen and Pineda go to one or several of four sites—either the Flat Iron Lake Preserve Prairie, two golf courses, or the Goodwillie Environmental School—to monitor bird boxes, and spend several hours trail-walking around the Flat Iron Nature Preserve, recording flower numbers, blooming status, and drawing specimens.
A multifaceted effort
“I think one of the fun pieces of the project, but also one of the challenging pieces, is that there are so many different aspects,” said Proppe. “The amount of tools that they’re using is really broad,” he added, “which is a pretty unique component of the project.”
Collaboration, Proppe explained, has been a key part of the project, as the three organizations and the individual whose properties are being accessed are invested in the health of their bluebird populations.
“The collaborative effort has been fun because it means that what we’re doing is going to extend further—we have people that care and are waiting to see what will happen,” said Proppe.