'Imagine a world without their song': Toronto photographer wins international award for picture of 4,000 dead birds
Thousands of dead birds, from kingfishers to blue jays, encircle a wild turkey to illustrate in one snapshot a mere fragment of how many die from colliding into glass windows – a death that can be easily prevented, the Torontonian photographer says.
This photograph, 'When Worlds Collide,' was captured by Patricia Homonylo. She is a conservation photojournalist who was just awarded the international title of bird photographer of the year for this piece.
The image beat out more than 23,000 photographs from across the world.
The bodies of 4,000 birds who died by window collisions were collected over the span of just one year, from a few city blocks in Toronto and Mississauga, Homonylo said. Then, they were meticulously arranged by members of Fatal Light Awareness Program (FLAP) Canada for, what Homonylo called, "the bird layout."
"The volunteers gather once a year in order to create this beautiful display. It's a difficult time. It is a necessary time," Homonylo told CTV News Toronto in an interview. "It's closure for the volunteers. It honours the birds lost … it's like having a wake or a mourning."
Perched over the top of a ladder with her camera out on a monopod, Homonylo said it's the "only" way to see the scene and understand the magnitude of "the beauty and the tragedy" of what these birds represent.
"I want (people) to be shocked, and I want them to be angry, and I want them to demand of their governments for bird safe cities," Homonlyo said.
Patricia Homonylo's photograph 'When Worlds Collide,' featuring 4,000 birds that died from collisions with windows in Toronto. (Courtesy of Patricia Homonylo)
Environment Canada says between 16 to 42 million birds die from window collisions in the country every year. FLAP Canada reports more than 700,000 migratory birds have died so far this year – a number that rapidly increases on their website.
That pales in comparison to the U.S., the agency adds, which sees up to 988 million birds dying from this same cause.
"We're losing our migratory bids at a catastrophic rate, and imagine a world without their song," Homonlyo said.
'Easiest issue to resolve'
There are two characteristics of buildings that pose a threat to birds, Michael Mesure, FLAP's co-founder and executive director, tells CTV News Toronto, and it all comes down to the glass itself: the transparent qualities of glass where birds think they see a clear passage through, or windows reflecting the surrounding habitat.
"The interesting thing about this issue is we've all at some point in time experienced this, at our homes, our cottages, our workplace – we've all seen or heard a bird hit a window," Mesure said.
"The other part of this, it isn't just happening during the migration seasons, like most people think, it's happening all year round, affecting a mass variety of species. This is why it's now considered the second-leading cause of bird death across the country."
Preventing their death is also the easiest and fastest issue to resolve, Mesure said.
"Let's say there's a lake that's been killed by chemicals and efforts are made to bring that lake back to life. Well, that doesn't happen overnight, that takes months, years, sometimes decades to see that lake come back to life again. You apply windows to markers, the moment you do that, and you do it properly, you're reducing that threat by anywhere from 80 to 90 per cent," Mesure said.
The key is to make the entire window look like a barrier to birds, and FLAP outlines a slew of window marker guidelines for Canadians to follow. On a Toronto-wide level, in 2007, the city enacted bird-friendly development guidelines providing a list of strategies for buildings to follow, including how to make glass less dangerous and how to curb light pollution making glass less dangerous and mitigating light pollution, as lights can throw birds off course.
Under Ontario's Environmental Protection Act (EPA) and Canada's Species at Risk Act (SARA), it is an offence for a building to emit reflected light that kills or injures birds.
"These current standards are now being used as templates all across North America," Mesure said. "That's all wonderful news. The problem we're finding is the vast majority of bids are dying at existing buildings. And there's no guidelines, policies, bylaws, mandatory requirements coming from the municipal level to address that concern."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Downtown Vancouver stabbing suspect dead after being shot by police
A suspect is dead after being shot by police in a Vancouver convenience store after two people were injured in a stabbing Wednesday morning, according to authorities.
2 Canadians confirmed dead in Poland, as consular officials gather information
Two Canadians have died following an incident in Poland, CTV News has learned.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford calls Donald Trump 'funny guy' in Fox News interview
Ontario Premier Doug Ford called U.S. president-elect Donald Trump a 'funny guy' on Wednesday in an interview with Fox News for his comment that Canada should become the United States's 51st state.
Toddler fatally shot after his 7-year-old brother finds a gun in the family's truck
A two-year-old boy was fatally shot when his seven-year-old brother found a gun in the glovebox of the family's truck in Southern California, authorities said.
DEVELOPING As police search for suspect, disturbing video surfaces after U.S. health-care CEO gunned down in New York
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed Wednesday morning in what investigators suspect was a targeted shooting outside a Manhattan hotel where the health insurer was holding an investor conference.
Millions in Cuba remain in dark after nationwide blackout
Cuba said it was generating only enough electricity to cover about 1/6th of peak demand late on Wednesday, hours after its national grid collapsed leaving millions without power.
'Utterly absurd': Freeland rebuffs Poilievre's offer of two hours to present fall economic statement
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has rebuffed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's offer to give up two hours of scheduled opposition time next Monday to present the awaited fall economic statement as 'utterly absurd.'
Canada Post stores continue to operate during strike — but why?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
Mattel sued over 'Wicked' dolls with porn website link
Mattel was sued this week by a South Carolina mother for mistakenly putting a link to an adult film site on the packaging for its dolls tied to the movie 'Wicked.'