Return of the Sandpiper
Thanks to the Delaware Bay's horseshoe crabs, the tide may be turning for an imperiled shorebird
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Doug Gritzmacher
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Female crabs take ten years or more to mature, so the offspring of the first crabs spared after 1998 are only now ready to mate. Their presence might help explain the spectacular spawning this year.
Red knots—which can live ten years or longer—are also relatively slow to breed: though the 6-week-old chicks will flutter south after the brief Arctic summer, they won't be ready to migrate north and mate for two years.
There are also myriad dangers outside the bay area, which, after all, is just a tiny portion of the territory these birds cover. The knots are vulnerable to oil spills, late snowmelts in the Arctic and even lemming population trends; if the lemmings die off, northern predators devour shorebird chicks instead. "If everything's great in Delaware, something awful can happen in the Arctic," Clark said. But all these potential stresses make a reliable food supply at their main rest stop even more vital.
As tagging wrapped up, several military helicopters swooped low over the harbor. The birders wondered if the choppers were carrying dignitaries, maybe even the president, to Washington from nearby Dover Air Force base. This possibility did not diminish their outrage at the disturbance. Hundreds of birds that had resumed pecking nearby took off, making a soft rushing sound with their flickering wings, like wind through marsh grass.
They never came back. Or so it seemed. Few shorebirds resumed feeding on the point that morning, and later in the day volunteers checked all the usual beaches: no knots. Nor were birds sighted the next day, save a handful of portly stragglers. Unbeknownst to the birders, flocks had likely begun leaving the evening before the tagging, steadily flowing out of the region. This was a day and a half ahead of schedule: they had plumped up quickly.
It could be that the birds fared well simply because there were more horseshoe crab eggs to go around. Other shorebird populations have declined in recent years as well, freeing up even more eggs.
"We're not sure exactly why things went well this year," said Larry Niles, a biologist with the Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New Jersey. "Crab populations don't change that fast and neither do shorebirds." Still, he added, "it was really gratifying to watch the birds go off in good condition." And for days after the knots departed, crabs continued to crowd the shallows, waiting for the tide to change.
Abigail Tucker is the magazine's staff writer. Doug Gritzmacher is a wildlife photographer and videographer.
CORRECTION: A photo in the October issue of Smithsonian magazine showed a sandpiper taking flight. The bird was incorrectly identified as a red knot; it was in fact a short-billed dowitcher. The photo has been removed from the photo gallery to avoid further confusion.
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Comments (13)
lol
Posted by ty on April 11,2012 | 09:48 AM
Why is all the red knot population on the Atlantic coast of North America ommitted from the from the total red knot population and only uses the state of NJ population as the entire red population. This should raise RED FLAGS.. Every state from fla to NJ has a red knot population at the same time NJ has Red knots here. Most Red Knot are found in April. All NJ studys don't start till May.The Delaware bay beaches on the NJ side are 80% gone, some are completely gone. you never here about the beach dymanics.. Some thing is wrong with this red Knot science... If there is any decline its not because of the Eggs of Horseshoe crabs its because of the researchers them self. Look at the (movie) U stun them them with cannons, drive them in the sand, shove thing in an around there buts, pull there feathers out, stick them with a needle to get there blood,pump there guts outs out, put them in a box four up to eight hours,put metal and plastic tags on there legs,and u did this to nearly the entire red Knot population. Why would u ever come back to this type of treatment.
Posted by Bad science on October 25,2011 | 10:57 PM
I grew up on the Delaware Bay and Nantuxent Creek in SSW, New Jersey and have lived in Cumberland County all of my life. Harvesting of horseshoe crabs are just a part of the bad practices, management problems and mishaps and should not have been summed up and dismissed in one sentence. The Delaware River and Bay is home to the fifth largest port complex in the United States and many refineries have come, gone and still exist on it’s shores. There have been 12 major reported oil spills in this estuary and it’s tributaries since 1972 due to negligence and large pieces of iron debris left in the bay.
There is also a problem with the oyster population in the bay and sturgeon have not been seen in the Maurice River for at least 25 years that I know of. The Vineland Chemical Company which manufactured arsenic-based herbicides from 1950 to 1994 on a 54 acre site in a residential and industrial area of the City of Vineland, stored byproduct arsenic salts in chicken coops and open piles on the Maurice River. In 2009, the EPA allocated $25 million in funding through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to the Vineland Superfund Site which brings the clean up total to $120,000,000.
PSE&G, a power supply company, owns over 20,000 acres of Delaware Bay coastline and used questionable means of acquiring portions of it’s holdings. While under PSE&G’s management dikes were opened, tracts of glades were flooded and horseshoe crabs and their eggs were trapped. This was not due to natural breeching but to the newly opened dikes.
The concern is what just one irresponsible county with a population of 146,000 in 2000, bad decision makers and a long history of industrial decline can do.
K.G. Weiss
Delaware Bay Area Luminist
Cedarville, N.J.
Posted by K.G. Weiss on November 22,2009 | 02:02 PM
Having recently completed a short documentary film entitled Witness to Hiroshima, about a Japanese soldier who gave aid and succor to victims right after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and then devoted his life to saving the Japanese horseshoe crab, I was interested to read your article on the American horseshoe crabs.
For the best information about the Delaware Bay horseshoe crab and the conservation efforts being made there, readers should go to www.horseshoecrab.org. Glenn Gauvry and his organization ERDG have a wealth of information available at the site, including teaching materials, local activities and ways to get involved in the protecting this marvelous creature.
For information about the film Witness to Hiroshima readers can go to : www.witnesstohiroshima.com
Sincerely,
Kathy Sloane, director
Witness to Hiroshima
Posted by kathy sloane on October 6,2009 | 05:10 PM
The Horseshoe Crab and the Red Knot shore bird relationship is one of natures unique happenings. In a world of disappearing wildlife areas, Deware Bay is still a place where you can see this nateral wonder. I produced a film about this here is is the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbT6Slf2e0M
Thanks Rich
Posted by Richard Paterson on October 4,2009 | 12:37 AM
This is a fascinating and informative article, and includes some of the best writing I have had the good fortune to read in a long time. I love your analogies such as "...their bodies litter the shoreline like rusting artillery from a forgotten war"! This piece is an example of why I always have and always will subscribe to, be a member of, and support the Smithsonian. Thank you very much, Abigail and Doug.
Posted by Jim McCallum (Bethesda, Maryland) on October 1,2009 | 11:13 AM
A good and timely article on an important bird / HS crab conservation concern. Unfortunately, the integrity of the feature is a bit tarnished with the inclusion of an obviously incorrect image of a Dowitcher (species) on page 60 of the feature. Any competent birder on your staff could have pointed out the mistake since the excellent photograph offers ample views of the Dowitcher species' characteristic field marks (conspicuous white wedge up the back and long bill), both of which exclude Red knot.
Posted by Patrick Leary on September 28,2009 | 08:12 AM
I've seen lots of articles on the Delaware Bay/NJ redknots but never have seen any interest in the 400-500 knots I see at Sunset Beach, NC, every year. They seem to double in number each year. Wondering why there is little scientific interest in their appearance and growth in NC, even among NC scientists. It seems to be a significant segment of the population migrating the U.S. east coast.
Posted by R. Climpson on September 25,2009 | 08:53 PM
I just studied the photo on page 60 carefully, and it is, in fact, a Red Knot.
Posted by Julian D. on September 25,2009 | 05:05 PM
greetings,..how could I get a down load or print or whatever of the beautiful photo on pg 60 of Sandpiper taking flight?
Posted by tim trost on September 24,2009 | 01:27 PM
Greatly enjoyed the article and its optimistic message. The great photo on page 60 of the magazine, however, is not a knot, it is a Short-billed Dowitcher.
Posted by Peter Kaestner on September 23,2009 | 09:31 PM
Great Red Not article and well done by the author, ABE
Posted by Abraham Person on September 19,2009 | 11:40 PM
I am a subscriber to SMITHSONIAN but did not see such an article, however, I am an old man, I have eye trouble, so I might've missed it. Anyway, this snippet was very good, even though I personally do not "know" this particular bird. One of my favorite places to go for a day's outing is St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, so may I ask: Does this particular bird stop by here (my home is about 85 miles from this location) on its migrations? I would like to hear from someone who knows the answer to this question. SES
Posted by S E Sapp on September 19,2009 | 03:21 PM