Haida Gwaii home to a distinct but vulnerable pocket of northern goshawks
VANCOUVER — Haida Gwaii’s population of northern goshawks are the last remnant of a highly distinct genetic cluster of the birds, a new study by University of British Columbia researchers has found.
Researchers estimate the population of birds may have been evolving separately on Haida Gwaii for 20,000 years — right around the last time the glaciers melted, causing the sea levels to rise and potentially separating the birds from their kin.
While the birds can fly long distances — with goshawks from Michigan and Manitoba travelling as far away as the central United States — they don’t seem to like travelling over water, which could account for their long-term isolation, said study co-lead Armando Geraldes.
“There don’t seem to be strong geographic barriers anywhere on the continent but then you get that body of water — about 70 kilometres of water between Haida Gwaii and the mainland — and that is apparently is enough to isolate that population,” he said.