A Puffin Comeback
Atlantic puffins had nearly vanished from the Maine coast until a young biologist defied conventional wisdom to lure them home
- By Michelle Nijhuis
- Photographs by Jose Azel
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Eastern Egg Rock has a human population of three, minimal electricity and no plumbing. Thousands of gulls swoop over the island, their cries combining into a near-deafening cackle. Terns, their narrow white wings angled like airborne origami sculptures, dive for human heads, the birds’ shrill scolds adding to the cacophony. Underfoot, gangs of chubby tern chicks scuttle in and out of the grass, testing their wings with tentative flaps.
On the boulders that rim the island, more seabirds loaf in the midsummer sun, gathering in cliques to gossip and preen—looking for all the world like an avian cocktail party.
A puffin in flight, stumpy wings whirring, careers in for a landing. Orange feet spread wide, it approaches a boulder, wobbles in the air for an instant, and—pop!—hits the rock, a fish shining in its striped, oversized beak. The puffin hops into a crevice between two rocks, presumably to deliver the fish to a hungry chick, and bounds back up to mingle with other puffins before its next expedition.
Each puffin pair raises a single chick. Once the young bird fledges, it heads south, but no one knows exactly where the juveniles spend their first two to three years. Though puffins are speedsters—they can reach 55 miles an hour in flight—their greatest talents are displayed at sea, where they use their feet and wings to maneuver expertly underwater.
“Never let it be said that puffins are awkward,” says Kress, who is director of Project Puffin and affiliated with Cornell University. “They can dive more than 200 feet in water, they can burrow like groundhogs and they can scamper over rocks. They’re all-purpose birds.”
On Eastern Egg Rock, Kress sits in a cramped plywood bird blind on the edge of the island, watching the seabirds toil for their chicks. Even after countless hours hunched behind binoculars, he’s still charmed by his charges.
Kress once imagined that he could one day leave the islands for good, the puffin colonies restored and the project’s work complete. He was wrong.
It became clear that two large gull species—the herring and black-backed gulls that prey on puffin chicks—weren’t going away. Kress had to play God again, this time to give puffins another ally in their battle against gulls: terns.
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Comments (20)
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I love the "Sandwich" label on the rock. We used those labels to remember which loafing spot was where when we were assigned to monitor the puffin activity (and bands, LOTS of band number reading! You saw a lot of really fantastic examples of puffin behavior on top of those uric acid-iced rock slabs. I worked for 2 summers (2003 &2005) and can say that the puffins are a success story that I'm proud to have a tiny hand in. Thanks, Steve Kress. Thanks for lighting up my heart on Hog Island, when you told us we were field biologists. I'd achieved one of my life goals that day. I'm working now to continue Stacey M. Hollis Journalism Grad Student Field Biologist Nature Lover Reporter for Eugene Weekly Artist Photographer ..and my main, most important, greatest passion of all is for those feathered creatures that can take to the skies and soar above all the rest. Thanks :) ps. Impossibly cute, yes, but when you're head first, half-a-body-length down in the boulder jumbles craning every last muscle and the tips of your fingers hit soft down, you may just realize what you were put on this earth for. Check out their website, they always welcome volunteers (rookie birders and experts alike!! Just watch out for the beak, it packs a punch!! <3
Posted by Stacey Hollis on May 30,2012 | 01:15 PM
PUFFINS ARE SO ADORABLE!<3
Posted by Danielle on March 8,2011 | 10:43 AM
I have been house-sitting off and on, over the years, at this home which is located a couple few miles off the back side of Cornell. And, in fact I am house-sitting right now at this very house while its owners are in Maine, where the husband has a position dealing with some birdies. Normally he is at the Ornithology Lab at Cornell, but in the summertime he always goes to Maine. So imagine my surprise when I was at my chiropractors' office last month, and on the table in one of her treatment rooms was a copy of the Smithsonian magazine with a cover displaying the very same birds which are portrayed all over the house, for which I was to house-sit; in short it's Steven Kress' abode, and I at last got a better idea of what this fellow has been doing with his life. As they said in the close of the article: "A puffineers' work is never done."
David Kauber, usually Aurora, NY
Posted by David Kauber on July 20,2010 | 11:20 PM
Great article, Steven. Thanks for all your continued hard work in not only bringing the puffins back to the coast of Maine, but maintaining an environment in which they continue to breed. You never cease to inspire and amaze me! You've given the term, "man with a mission" a whole new meaning!
Posted by Charleen Heidt on June 14,2010 | 05:35 PM
I WANT TO HONOR THIS GENTLEMAN FOR HAVING A GOAL AND NOT GIVING UP. WE ALL ARE TO BE CARETAKERS OF OUR KINGDOM, NOT MANY DO.
THANKS FOR YOUR LOVE AND KINDNESS.
CLAUDIA
Posted by Claudia on June 8,2010 | 10:29 AM
Come see these beauties first hand! :)
Saturday, June 26: First Annual Pemaquid Watershed Association Puffin Sunset Cruise from 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. with Hardy Boat Cruises. Sailing out of New Harbor to Eastern Egg Rock, we’ll circle the island for great views of puffins, terns and other seabirds. A pass by the lighthouse at Pemaquid Point at sunset will combine birding with a lovely summer evening on the Maine coast. Cash bar; Desserts will be provided. Tickets are $30 each from PWA at 207.563.2196 or info@pemaquidwatershed.org.
Posted by Donna Minnis, PWA Executive Director on June 7,2010 | 03:01 PM
Thank you for sharing the information about Puffins
I have always wanted to see one in the flesh--s0 t0 speak--
Posted by Jean Scott on June 6,2010 | 10:08 PM
I remember one day when I was living in San Jose, California; I was washing dishes. I looked out the kitchen window in front of me. To my surprise I saw a Puffin bird sitting on the fence. San Jose is not a coastal city, but it is part of the San Francisco Bay Area. I have no clue where it came from.
Posted by Cynthia on June 3,2010 | 01:24 AM
There are so very many things that hold our attention and obscure the world of nature. Many thanks are due Dr. Kress for restoring this beautiful view and for bringing to our attention this magnificent creature and all the wondrous happenings that accompany the life of this gift of nature. Our lives are richer as the result of his efforts.
Posted by Miriam Wagner on June 3,2010 | 10:35 PM
Thats a great piece I really enjoyed it I have lived in maine most of my life I wonder if maybe they could put decoy chicks out that gave a shock to the gulls would work bet it would lol
Posted by mike townsend on June 3,2010 | 03:06 PM
What a heartwarming story! It's so wonderful to read of a successful attempt at restoring a species. Steve Kress deserves an award, along with his associates that believed in him. Fantastic work, Steve! These birds are adorable! Thanks to people like Steve Kress, there is always hope in the world.
Posted by Speddog on June 3,2010 | 01:18 PM
When I saw the puffins on the cover of the June issue of "Smithsonian," I immediately thought, "Stephen Kress," so I was delighted to read "Comeback!" I was privileged to hear a lecture Mr. Kress gave in April 2001 for the Holden Arboretum in Kirtland, Ohio. Mr. Kress, a birding authority nonpareil, kindly signed my copy of his book "The Bird Garden." In the author photo on the book jacket, he is wearing a tam o'shanter, and I've always wondered about that choice of hat. Now I know why he wears a pom-bedecked tam! Thanks so much for this excellent article and the marvelous photos.
Posted by Karen Ketchaver on June 3,2010 | 11:19 AM
What wonderful work and goals you have acheived in your lifetime. I am thrilled, and I beleive other class mates of yours from the " dark and frozen tundra of Bexley ", to know you and call you friend.
I hope others in your field and and related sciences will take notice of your success.
Posted by Garry Beim on June 3,2010 | 10:54 AM
Thanks for spotting, David - "careers" is actually the intended word, as in rushing in at full speed.
Posted by Michelle Nijhuis on June 2,2010 | 10:02 PM
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