The din created by thousands of nesting birds is usually the first
thing you notice about Seahorse Key, a 150-acre mangrove-covered dune
off Florida's Gulf Coast near Cedar Key and Sumner. But in May, the key fell eerily quiet all at once.
Thousands of little blue herons, roseate spoonbills, snowy egrets,
pelicans and other chattering birds were gone. Nests sat empty in trees;
eggs broken and scattered on the muddy ground.
"It's a dead zone now," said Vic Doig, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service biologist. "This is where the largest bird colony on the Gulf
Coast of Florida used to be."
For decades, Seahorse Key has been a protected way station for myriad
bird species. It's part of the Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge,
about 21 miles west northwest of Crystal River, established in 1929 as a
sanctuary for birds devastated by decades of hunting for their colorful
plumage. Accessible only by boat, today it's a rare island off Florida
not dominated by human activity and development.
When the birds come to nest, so too do biologists and naturalists who
study the different colonies. But this year, the birds' exit has the
state's avian biologists scrambling for answers.
"It's not uncommon for birds to abandon nests," said Peter Frederick,
a University of Florida wildlife biologist who has studied Florida's
birds for nearly 30 years. "But, in this case, what's puzzling is that
all of the species did it all at once."
Doig said some of the Seahorse birds seem to have moved to a nearby
island, but they're just a fraction of the tens of thousands of birds
that would normally be nesting on the key right now.
To find answers, service biologists have been acting on the few clues they have.
First, they tested left-behind bird carcasses for disease or contaminants. Those tests came back negative.
Next, they researched possible new predators. Did raccoons swim over
from another island? Perhaps some great horned owls flew out at night
and started feasting?
Traps caught a few raccoons, which is common, but not enough to have
created a wholesale abandonment. There were no telltale signs of owls.
Finally, Doig said, recent years have seen an increase in night
flights over the area by surveillance planes and helicopters used to
combat drug runners. Although the planes' noise could be disruptive,
Doig admits it's a longshot.
The abandonment concerns biologists because it could have a ripple
effect: Many bird species here return year after year to the same
nesting sites. The disruption provokes anxiety that this important
island refuge could somehow be lost.
"Any rookery that's persisted for decades as one of the largest
colonies is incredibly important," said Janell Brush, an avian
researcher with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
"It's quite a large colony. There had to be some intense event that
would drive all these birds away."
Biologist also don't know how the disappearance will affect the
island's other animals, some of which rely on the birds to survive.
Cottonmouth snakes eat bird predators like rodents, and in turn the
birds drop lots of fish and other nutrients from the trees to feed the
snakes.
In the meantime, tour operators that once spent hours taking
naturalists and bird watchers to the island are making other plans.
Mike O'Dell runs tours out of the little marina in nearby Cedar Key.
He said on a Tuesday in May he led a group out to view thousands of
birds crowding the shores of the key. On Wednesday, there was nothing.
"It's just that drastic," O'Dell said. "There were none. It's like a different world."
Source: New York Times
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