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Understanding the value of imperfect science from national estimates of bird mortality from window collisions

January 1, 2014

The publication of a U.S. estimate of bird–window collisions by Loss et al. is an example of the somewhat contentious approach of using extrapolations to obtain large-scale estimates from small-scale studies. We review the approach by Loss et al. and other authors who have published papers on human-induced avian mortality and describe the drawbacks and advantages to publishing what could be considered imperfect science. The main drawback is the inherent and somewhat unquantifiable bias of using small-scale studies to scale up to a national estimate. The direct benefits include development of new methodologies for creating the estimates, an explicit treatment of known biases with acknowledged uncertainty in the final estimate, and the novel results. Other overarching benefits are that these types of papers are catalysts for improving all aspects of the science of estimates and for policies that must respond to the new information.

Publication Year 2014
Title Understanding the value of imperfect science from national estimates of bird mortality from window collisions
DOI 10.1650/CONDOR-13-134.1
Authors Craig S. Machtans, Wayne E. Thogmartin
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Condor
Index ID 70195290
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center