Your Windows Are Killing Migratory Birds

Cedar Valley News
April 16, 2026
Your Windows Are Killing Migratory Birds
By Chloe Papadakis

There was a small bird on our back step this morning.

I almost stepped on it before I saw it. Brown, about the size of my fist, lying on its side near the door. I have found birds at our windows before and always assumed it was bad luck. I went looking for what it actually was.

Up to one billion birds die every year in the United States from striking windows. It is the second-leading cause of bird deaths in the country, behind only habitat loss. And the part nobody in Cedar Valley is likely to know: it is not primarily a skyscraper problem. It is not Chicago or New York. It is us. Fifty-six percent of collision deaths happen at low-rise buildings. Forty-four percent happen at residences. Homes like mine. Homes like yours. Every resident in America is estimated to kill an average of two birds per year.

Think about Cedar Valley. Count the houses on your street.

Dr. Daniel Klem Jr. of Muhlenberg College conducted the first serious scientific study of bird window collisions in the United States and has studied this issue since the 1970s. He believes, to this day, it is an underappreciated problem causing irreparable damage to bird populations.

The mechanics are simple and terrible. Birds cannot see glass as a barrier. They see what the glass reflects — trees, sky, the yard behind them — and they fly toward it. Spring migration is happening right now. The birds moving through Cedar Valley today are the same ones people here have put feeders out for, kept a yard for. Billions are in the air. Our windows are in the way.

I looked up at the window above where the bird lay. The glass was reflecting the yard behind me — the maple, the patch of sky, the neighbor’s fence. A perfect picture of somewhere to fly.

I am not writing this to make anyone feel guilty. What is useful is this: the fix is simple, inexpensive, and available today.

You can break up the reflection. Tape, paint pens, window film with small dots or patterns placed two to four inches apart across the glass surface. There are products made specifically for this — window tape, Feather Friendly film, even painter’s tape — and they cost a few dollars. The pattern breaks the mirror effect, so birds see the glass instead of flying through it.

You can move a feeder. If a bird feeder sits more than three feet from a window, a bird in flight has enough speed to be killed on impact. Move it to within three feet and a collision becomes a tap, not a fatal strike.

You can turn off lights at night during migration. Birds navigate by stars. Artificial light pulls them off course and leaves them circling until dawn, exhausted and vulnerable.

None of this requires money most people don’t have. None of it requires a permit or a contractor. It requires knowing the problem exists. Until this week, I did not know. Now I do.

I buried the bird from my step this morning under the maple tree. Elena asked what I was doing. I told her a bird had flown into our window and died, and I was putting it back in the ground.

She asked if we could stop it from happening again.

We went inside and put tape on the windows.

If you found a bird at your window this week, you are not alone — and you are not out of options. The Cedar Valley News Facebook group is where the conversation continues. Come tell us what you found, what you tried, or what you still have questions about. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, Dr. Daniel Klem Jr. and the research described are real.

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