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 3 of 5)
But no puffins nested on Eastern Egg Rock that year, or the next. Or the next. A few of the transplanted birds nested with the existing puffin colony on Matinicus Rock, but not one had accepted Eastern Egg Rock as its home.
Shortly before sunset on July 4, 1981, Kress was scanning Eastern Egg Rock with his telescope when he spotted a puffin, beak full of fish, scrambling into a rocky crevice. The bird hopped out, empty-beaked, and flew away, while another adult puffin stood by watching. It was the long-hoped-for evidence of a new chick on the island.
“After 100 years of absence and nine years of working toward this goal,” Kress wrote in the island logbook that evening, “puffins are again nesting at Eastern Egg Rock—a Fourth of July celebration I’ll never forget.”
Today, Eastern Egg Rock hosts more than 100 pairs of nesting puffins. Boatloads of tourists chug out to peer at them through binoculars. Kress and his “puffineers”—biologists and volunteers—have also reintroduced puffins to Seal Island, a former Navy bombing range that now serves as a national wildlife refuge. On Matinicus Rock, also a national wildlife refuge, the puffin population has grown to an estimated 350 pairs. Razorbills, a larger, heavier cousin to the puffin, also nest among the boulders; common and Arctic terns nest nearby. In all, a century after Atlantic puffins almost disappeared from the United States, at least 600 pairs now nest along the Maine coast.
Today seabirds around the world benefit from techniques pioneered by Kress and his puffineers. Bird decoys, recorded calls and in some cases, mirrors—so seabirds will see the movements of their own reflections and find the faux colonies more realistic—have been used to restore 49 seabird species in 14 countries, including extremely rare birds such as the tiny Chatham petrel in New Zealand and the Galápagos petrel on the Galápagos Islands.
“A lot of seabird species aren’t willing to come back to islands on their own—they’re not adventurous enough,” says Bernie Tershy, a seabird researcher at the University of California at Santa Cruz. “So in the big picture, Steve’s work is a critical component of protecting seabirds.” With more and larger breeding colonies, seabirds are more likely to survive disease outbreaks, oil spills and other disasters.
Despite these successes, seabirds are still declining more quickly than any other group of birds, largely because of invasive predators, habitat loss, pollution and baited hooks set out by longline fishing fleets; many species will also likely suffer as climate change leads to rising sea levels and skimpier food supplies, says Tershy.
Project Puffin tactics are already deployed against these new threats. For example, the Bermuda petrel lives on a group of tiny, low-lying atolls off the Bermuda coast, where it is vulnerable to mere inches of sea-level rise or a single powerful storm. Scientists recently employed Kress’ techniques to relocate petrel chicks to higher ground, a nearby island called Nonsuch where the birds had been driven off by hunters and invasive species. Last summer, a petrel chick hatched and fledged on Nonsuch Island—the first to do so in almost 400 years.
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Comments (20)
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
Typo on 4th page, should be careens in for a landing, not careers in
Posted by David Derbyshire on June 2,2010 | 10:25 AM
I love these little birds and look forward to taking a trip to the coast of Maine someday to see them. So glad to hear about Project Puffin, thanks Dr Kress.
Posted by Stephanie Michele on May 26,2010 | 10:31 AM
Steve Kress is an amazing researcher and a great teacher. I enjoy working with and for him. He takes his position very seriously and it's not just that he genuinely cares about nature and wildlife, but that he has an ability to pass on (and foster) his interest and enthusiasm through educating others. If I have learned nothing else from him, I have learned that it is OUR responsibility to be good stewards of the planet, and it's a responsibility that we ALL need to take seriously. And as for the puffins. They just just really, really cute - visit Maine and take a puffin tour! Details can be found on projectpuffin.org - and you can also get project info there (you can even submit your name to intern or volunteer if you like).
Posted by Terry Mingle on May 25,2010 | 08:47 AM
First-time ever poster...had to say how much Kress' work impressed me...great BIG thanks, Kress. Wonderful article!!
Posted by Is Cloak on May 23,2010 | 01:25 PM
Steve Kress is a global leader in seabird restoration. He is also a remarkable colleague and great mentor for the next generation of seabird specialists. Work such as his requires support and commitment by many people who cannot be directly involved in the day-to-day effort to protect puffins. In particular, seabird conservation depends on public awareness as well as donor support and funding. Individuals can make a real difference. I urge everyone to learn more about seabirds and to give moral and financial support to these important conservation and restoration efforts.
Willy Bemis is Kingsbury Director of Shoals Marine Laboratory
Posted by Willy Bemis on May 23,2010 | 11:53 AM
I am proud of the team and definitely agree that if we have played the devil for the last 500 years, it is time to move to the other side! I also read that a senior Managing Director at Citi quit to join hands at protecting tigers in India. The world is a better place because of some that care beyond propagation of their own species, terns included!
Posted by Rohit on May 20,2010 | 04:40 PM