Author: Madhok, Raahil; Gulati, Sumeet
Title: Ruling the Roost: Avian Species Reclaim Urban Habitat During India’s COVID Lockdown Cord-id: 6pi0w70v Document date: 2020_12_16
ID: 6pi0w70v
Snippet: As we retreated to our dwellings in the “anthropause†of spring 2020, did other species return to our urban centres? We leverage an increase in balcony birdwatching, a million eBird entries, and difference-in-difference techniques to test if avian species richness rose during India’s COVID lockdown. We find that birdwatchers in India’s 20 most populous cities observed 8-17% more species during the lockdown. Most additional observations occurred after a two-week lag, signaling greater abu
Document: As we retreated to our dwellings in the “anthropause†of spring 2020, did other species return to our urban centres? We leverage an increase in balcony birdwatching, a million eBird entries, and difference-in-difference techniques to test if avian species richness rose during India’s COVID lockdown. We find that birdwatchers in India’s 20 most populous cities observed 8-17% more species during the lockdown. Most additional observations occurred after a two-week lag, signaling greater abundance instead of improved detection. More frequent appearances of at-risk, rare, and common species were recorded, implying that making our cities more wildlife friendly can protect threatened species in addition to urban specialists. Our contributions are: 1) to isolate and estimate a causal impact of reducing human activity on avian diversity, 2) to improve the external validity of this literature in rapidly urbanizing bio-diverse developing countries, and, 3) to illustrate a method separating abundance from detection in observational avian surveys.
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