# Underestimated Fatalities of a Cryptic Avian Species of Conservation Concern at Wind Energy Facilities in California, USA

**Authors:** Todd E. Katzner, Ashley M. Spicer, Patricia A. Ortiz, Tara J. Conkling

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72855 · 2026-01-26

## TL;DR

Endangered tricolored blackbirds are being killed at wind facilities in California, but are often misidentified as more common species, leading to underestimated fatalities.

## Contribution

The study reveals that tricolored blackbird fatalities are significantly underestimated due to misidentification, impacting conservation efforts.

## Key findings

- 19× underestimation of tricolored blackbird fatalities due to misidentification.
- 65% of 'unidentified blackbirds' were actually tricolored blackbirds.
- Tricolored blackbirds are much less abundant than red-winged blackbirds but are disproportionately affected.

## Abstract

Accurate information underpins successful ecological science and management. Cryptic species, those that are difficult to differentiate, pose challenges to reliable collection of taxon‐specific information. Blackbirds, including tricolored blackbirds (
Agelaius tricolor
), a cryptic species of high conservation concern, and red‐winged blackbirds (
Agelaius phoeniceus
), an abundant congener, are sometimes killed by wind turbines. We used publicly available survey records to evaluate rates at which blackbirds were reported dead at wind energy facilities in California, USA. We then used genetic species identification of carcasses found to estimate true rates of discovery and of misidentification. Of 329 blackbird fatalities in survey records, most were identified as red‐winged (n = 149), “unidentified” (n = 90), or Brewer's (
Euphagus cyanocephalus
; n = 70); only 13 were identified as tricolored. We also genetically analyzed samples from 40 blackbirds. Of 14 carcasses identified in the field to species, two, including one tricolored, were incorrectly called Brewer's blackbirds (14% misidentification rate). Of the 26 birds called “unidentified blackbird” in the field, 17 (65%) were tricolored, leading to a 19× underestimation of true fatality rate. The state‐wide population of tricolored blackbirds is < 1% the size of that of red‐winged blackbirds. A large proportion of blackbirds found dead were actually tricoloreds, indicating that fatality rates of this state threatened species may be substantially underestimated. The potential for misidentification or nonidentification may create perverse incentives that undermine conservation and have consequences for on‐the‐ground management, mitigation, and operations of high‐priority infrastructure.

Blackbirds killed at wind turbines in California, USA, are typically assumed to be common red‐winged blackbirds. In reality, a surprising number of them are endangered tri‐colored blackbirds. This finding has important implications for the way fatalities are managed at these wind facilities.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Agelaius tricolor (taxon 9191), Agelaius phoeniceus (taxon 39638), Euphagus cyanocephalus (taxon 84817)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Turdus merula (Amsel, species) [taxon 9187], Agelaius tricolor (tricolored blackbird, species) [taxon 9191], Euphagus cyanocephalus (Brewer's blackbird, species) [taxon 84817], Agelaius phoeniceus (red-winged blackbird, species) [taxon 39638]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12834644/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12834644