In India, few are tracking birds colliding with glass in buildings


Bird deaths from collisions with glass structures are a global problem. But in India, conservationists are just beginning to learn the scale of the issue, reports Mongabay India’s Kartik Chandramouli.

While humans are taught the concept of glass and its transparency, birds likely perceive the reflection of vegetation or the sky as reality, researchers say, leading to collisions, often fatal.

In Gujarat state, in western India, for example, more than a dozen migratory rosy starlings (Pastor roseus) crashed into a glass building in February 2022. In Meghalaya, in northeast India, several long-tailed broadbills (Psarisomus dalhousiae) collided with the façade of an automobile showroom in January this year.

While such sporadic local reports exist, well-recorded data on bird collisions are generally missing in India. Only recently have a few studies started offering some trends. A 2025 study in Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve in southern India recorded 35 instances of collisions in just one year, involving 22 bird species, including the endemic Nilgiri wood pigeon (Columba elphinstonii). These collisions involved two-story buildings. 

“Tall glass skyscrapers are not the only culprits,” Peeyush Sekhsaria, an architect and bird-watcher, told Mongabay India. Many birds in India move between trees and plants tall enough to reach the fourth floor, placing most buildings directly in their flight paths.

Given the lack of data, Sekhsaria and Ashwin Viswanathan, an ecologist at the nonprofit Nature Conservation Foundation, launched a citizen science project called Bird Collisions India on the iNaturalist app in 2020. As of April 2026, it’s recorded nearly 88 cases of bird collisions involving 47 species. The Indian pitta (Pitta brachyura), a vibrant migratory bird, appears frequently among the reports.

Sekhsaria and Viswanathan have also collected reports of bird-building collisions on Facebook posts, iNaturalist observations and eBird entries, and through interviews with wildlife rescue organizations. So far, they’ve compiled roughly 500 collision reports involving more than 80 species. Most records come from the city of Bengaluru, though, and aren’t representative of a national trend.

Both projects have shown Sekhsaria and Viswanathan that citizen science isn’t enough to reveal the full scale of the bird collision problem in India. Wildlife rescue organizations in cities, which often treat injured birds, could help fill the gap if they collected data systematically.

Bengaluru’s Avian and Reptile Rehabilitation Centre (ARRC) has started collecting collision incidents through a standardized reporting form and aims to develop a protocol that other centers can adopt. But implementation could be challenging, Jayanthi Kallam of ARRC told Mongabay India. Many rescue centers in India have limited staff and funding, maintain handwritten or digital logs, or have no recordkeeping at all.

Without more coordinated monitoring, scientists don’t have a full picture of hotspots for bird collisions or understand what species are most vulnerable to collisions.  

Read the full story by Kartik Chandramouli here.

Banner image: The Indian pitta is vulnerable to collisions with glass surfaces in India. Image by Sinijose Jose via iNaturalist (CC BY-NC 4.0).







Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *