When Eavesdropping Pays Off - podcast episode cover

When Eavesdropping Pays Off

Jun 25, 202512 minEp. 1297
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS

Summary

Explore the vital role prairie dogs play in grassland ecosystems. Learn how long-billed curlews eavesdrop on prairie dog alarm calls to detect predators, a behavior tested using a remote-controlled taxidermy badger. The findings highlight how conserving prairie dogs is crucial for the survival of many other grassland species.

Episode description

Why did the ornithologist strap a taxidermy badger to a remote controlled car and drive it around the prairie? To interrogate the secret world of animal eavesdropping in the grasslands, of course! Today on the show, we travel to the most imperiled ecosystem on the planet to unravel a prairie mystery and find out why prairie dogs are grassland engineers worth keeping tabs on.

Special thanks to Andrew Spencer and the
Cornell Lab of Ornithology for providing the Long-billed Curlew call recording, and to American Prairie for providing prairie soundscape recordings.

Got a question about other animal ecosystem engineers? Email us at [email protected].

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript

Intro / Opening

The House of Representatives has approved a White House request to claw back two years of previously approved funding for public media. The rescissions package now moves on to the Senate. This move poses a serious threat to local stations and public media as we know it. Please take a stand for public media today at goacpr.org. Thank you.

Grasslands, Curlews, and Prairie Dogs

You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Grasslands are the most threatened ecosystem on the planet, which is a problem because... They store a lot of carbon. One third of all carbon on land is found in grasslands. And Andy Boyce has spent a lot of time standing in them.

Sometimes the grass is knee-high. Sometimes it's only stubble level. The prairie looks a little bit different wherever you go, and it changes hugely season to season. Go to Montana in early June, and the prairie is loud and teeming with life. There are several species of shorebirds flying around, singing, defending their territories. There are innumerable small, hidden species of songbirds.

And he studies birds, in particular, the long-billed curlew. A curlew is a shorebird about the size of a chicken with a mottled brown coat. and a long, thin beak that curves. And curlews build nests in the prairie. Now, Andy is an ecologist with the Great Plains Program at the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. And in 2020, he and then-intern Andrew Dreelin were tasked with catching one of these birds. But...

We were really having this problem with this one individual curlew where we would get within 5, 10, 20 feet of her and, you know, she would flush off the nest before we had a chance to capture her. Prairies are also home to prairie dogs. These burrowing ground squirrels that live in networks of burrows known as towns, which can stretch hundreds to thousands of acres. And when Andy and Andrew got close, the prairie dogs started calling. And I think I said, well, like...

You know, guys, I kind of think these prairie dogs are giving us away. And Andrew, who later became a grad student in the lab, wanted to find out. So Andy planted the seed of this idea, and it really got my, like... mad scientist energy up, and I decided to test this wild idea as part of my dissertation. So today on the show, why eavesdropping on prairie dogs is a legitimate survival strategy.

Plus how Andy and Andrew mimicked a predator on the landscape. I took a taxidermy badger and I strapped it to a remote-controlled car and made what we lovingly call the badgerinator. I'm Emily Kwong and you're listening to Shortwave. The Science Podcast from NPR. These days, there is a lot. of news. It can be hard to keep up with what it means for you, your family, and your community. Consider This from NPR as a podcast that helps you make sense of the news.

Six days a week, we bring you a deep dive on a story and provide the context, the backstory, and analysis you need to understand our rapidly changing world. Listen to the Consider This podcast from NPR. Brazilian women made a discovery. They could have an abortion without a doctor, thanks to a tiny pill. That pill spawned a global movement, helping millions of women have safe abortions, regardless of the law.

Hear that story on the network from NPR's Embedded and Futuro Media, wherever you get your podcasts. On the plus side, you get sponsor-free listening to over 25 NPR podcasts. On the minus side, you get fewer chances to tap fast forward on your podcast player. On the plus side, you get to support something you care about. On the minus side, you like challenges and think this makes it too easy. So why don't you join us on the plus side of things with NPR.

Learn more and sign up at plus.npr.org. Andy and Andrew, prairie dogs, in addition to being very adorable, they're ecologically really important. Prairie dogs are what's known as a keystone species. What is that? What role do they serve in the grasslands? Yeah, totally. So in general, when we say keystone species, we mean an animal, an organism that has a disproportionately large effect on an ecosystem relative to, let's say, its biomass.

Prairie dogs are food for a huge variety of species out on the prairie. Prairie dogs physically modify the environment in a ton of ways. So they build burrows that other species use. They graze vegetation to create this really short grass habitat that a lot of animals like to nest and forage in. They can't stand to have any sort of vertical structure in their colonies, probably because they like to have long sight lines. They don't like perching places for predators.

This habit they have of clipping woody vegetation on the landscape, you know, it's something that keeps grassland grassland. Like grasslands thrive with disturbance. They need it. Otherwise, they'll become forests or savannas. So let's dive into...

Testing Eavesdropping with the Badgerinator

the study that you and your team worked on, you all wanted to know if these long-billed curlews with nests near prairie dog towns were actually taking advantage of the calls of prairie dogs to be alerted to predators. Andrew, how did you go about studying that? Yeah, so the first step is to actually find a long-billed curlew nest, which takes hours of work sitting out on the prairie, watching very closely to, you know...

track a female or a male until they change incubation duties at the nest because their nests are super well concealed. And so pretty much the only way to reliably find a curlew nest is to watch for that changing of the guard and see that switch happen. And then, essentially, once we found that curlew nest, we would then flag out a little race course for our...

Badgerinator on wheels. And we would come back a couple days later after we gave the Curlews a little bit of downtime. And we would do one of two things. We would either have a speaker.

completely silent, not playing anything, or we would have a speaker playing a recording of prairie dog alarm calls in response to the badger. And the badginator is a... a taxidermied badger that you strap to a remote control car to be a predator-like proxy to see if it would, like, set off this chain of events, this, like, prairie dog call.

Exactly. Home alarm system. Okay. And I'm literally like... a football field away looking through a telescope while piloting the badger nader and so it actually took a decent amount of coordination to like pull it off and we've uh we're hiding either behind a work truck or behind a camouflage hunting blind, just trying to be as inconspicuous as possible. And we're essentially comparing the difference in the curlew's anti-predator behavior and that hunkering down on the nest.

with and without the prairie dog alarm calls to see if it gives that early warning advantage. The thing about long-billed curlews that made this whole study work is that they have two totally different ways of sitting on the nest when they're incubating. If they are not perceiving any sort of threat, you know, they're sitting on the nest on the ground, they've got their head up, they're like looking around for stuff, but...

When they're threatened or they perceive a predator on the landscape, they just totally pancake. So their long head and bill pressed totally down to the ground doing their best impression of a cow pie, basically. You mean a pile of... poop oh yeah yeah totally okay yeah go on go on no yeah there's this long long-standing hypotheses that they they are basically like they basically like mimic bison piles of bison dung on the landscape i love birds okay go on so anyway like

Because they have this binary behavior of basically either head up or head down, we can tell when they're perceiving a predator. What did you ultimately find in the data analysis? Yeah, so...

Study Results: Prairie Dogs Alert Curlews

I felt a huge wave of validation upon seeing the results. When the curlews could actually hear the prairie dog alarm calls, it made a three times difference in terms of the effectiveness of that behavior. So they hid when the badger was... three times further away. Is this a matter of life and death for them? That's what we think. Absolutely. Because these badgers are opportunistic predators. They're out there cruising around, just hoping to see something and smell something. Yeah.

The reason that we think this is extra important for curlews in particular is because they typically only have one nest a breeding season. So literally all of their eggs, all four of them are in one basket for the entire summer. If that nest gets eaten by a badger, then they have to wait a whole nother year, go through a whole nother migration cycle before they can have another nest. All of it makes me wonder about the work that prairie dogs are doing then.

Prairie Dog Importance and Conservation

on grasslands aside from being adorable they are one of a few keystone species in this habitat just to imagine it i mean if something were to happen to the prairie dogs how would it impact the grasslands Yeah, well, I have bad news. Things have been happening to prairie dogs. So we are right now sitting at about, prairie dog populations are sitting at about 2%.

of what they were historically before sort of Euro-American expansion through the West. So they have been systematically persecuted through poisoning and shooting. There's also this introduced disease called sylvatic plague, which has been introduced from Asia, which decimates prairie dog populations. So, you know, honestly, the system that we were working in is...

And it allows us to uncover some of these ecological relationships with prairie dogs. But it's really rare. Prairie dogs are gone from most of the grasslands that they used to occupy. And I think that's... One of the reasons we feel working on them is really important because uncovering these amazing things that they're doing on these landscape that potentially benefit other species we want to conserve will hopefully motivate increased prairie dog conservation efforts going forward.

Yeah. I mean, if prairie dog populations shrink, what's at stake for the grassland ecosystem? especially considering how much carbon is stored in grasslands. Yeah, we know that intact prairie holds way, way, way more or sequesters way, way, way more carbon than tilled agricultural land. So it's really important to keep grasslands grasslands.

I think as a society, we view the center of country, the Great Plains, as the breadbasket, right? And we see these landscapes as almost entirely for production. And they are hugely economically valuable. But because of that, you know, we don't have giant grassland national parks all over the country like we do in mountains or deserts or, you know, northeastern forests.

And in terms of the prairie dog conservation story, another important angle is how much work indigenous nations do in terms of conserving and restoring the prairie dog ecosystem. We worked on Fort Belknap Indian Reservation, which is home to the Ani and Nakoda nations. And just being out there on that landscape, which cows were grazing on the prairie dog towns, I was just so impressed with...

all the work that they were doing with very little resources to keep this ecosystem something close to what it formerly was. Andrew and I are hardcore prairie dog stans and aficionados at this point. There are other imperiled grassland species that rely completely on prairie dogs. If we want to have black-footed ferrets in this world, we need to do prairie dog conservation. Birds, there's a tremendous amount of money.

an interest in bird conservation. If we want to continue to have mountain plovers on this landscape, horned larks, long-billed curlews, burrowing owls, all these species rely on prairie dogs, so we can't effectively separate. bird conservation for those species with prairie dog conservation. Andy Boyce and Andrew Drelin, thank you so much for coming on Shortwave. Absolutely. Anytime. Thank you so much for having us, Emily.

Short waivers, you know what I'm going to ask. Please follow us on the NPR app or wherever you listen to podcasts. Your support truly helps the show. This episode was produced by Burley McCoy. It was edited by our showrunner, Rebecca Ramirez, and fact-checked by Tyler Jones. The audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez.

Beth Donovan is our senior director, and Colin Campbell is our senior vice president of podcasting strategy. I'm Emily Kwong. Thank you for listening to Shortwave from NPR. Can I hear your best prairie dog bark impersonation? Just a little like... Hello, it's Sarah Gonzalez. At Planet Money, when we say we want you to understand the economy, sure, we mean tariffs and global supply chains and interest rates, but also we shot a satellite into space. We made our own.

Vodka became a record label, made a comic book, all to help you make better sense of the world around you. Listen to the Planet Money podcast from NPR. It all starts with listening to the person in front of you and the person you'll never meet. to the person living a story and the journalist who helps you see it in a new light. The NPR network is built on listening, with microphones in every region, so where there are any time a voice or sound demands to be heard.

Hear stories in the first person. Hear the bigger picture on NPR. You know those things you shout at the radio or maybe even at this very NPR podcast? On NPR's Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, we actually say those things on the radio and on the podcast. We're rude across all media. We think the news can take it. Listen to NPR. Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, wherever you get your podcasts.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast