Back from the Brink
Not every endangered species is doomed. Thanks to tough laws, dedicated researchers, and plenty of money and effort, success stories abound
- By Daniel Glick
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 11)
Hawaii’s endangered species experience is instructive, Banko says, because the destruction and fragmentation of habitats as well as the domination of native species by invaders are the root causes of many species’ decline. “We see this as a microcosm of what’s happening on the continent in terms of watching ecological processes unravel,” he says. The process is just more obvious on a real island than on one of the ecological islands that increasingly occur on the mainland— isolated habitats surrounded by highways, strip malls and housing developments.
The palila was one of the first species to be protected under the ESA when an early version of the law passed in 1966. Still, state authorities did little until 1978, when the palila did what any red-blooded American bird would do: it sued. In Palila v. Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources (the first time a bird was a plaintiff in a lawsuit, which was brought by the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund), a federal court ruled that under the ESA, the state had to prevent further damage to the bird’s habitat. In the 1990s, when the U.S. Army proposed building a road through critical palila habitat, the ESA dictated that the military pay nearly $14.6 million to fund palila restoration projects.
By then, most palila were confined to a 12-square-mile forest on the west slope of Mauna Kea, between 7,000 and 9,000 feet. This lone population of about 3,000 birds easily could have been wiped out by fire, storms or a disease that strikes mamane trees. With the military’s mitigation money,
Banko and co-workers set out to expand the palila’s existing forest and establish a new palila population On Mauna Kea’s north side. Banko and others netted palila on the west slope, equipped them with tiny radio transmitters and moved them to the north slope. Most of the birds simply flew the 12 miles home. This past March, however, the researchers relocated another 75 wild palila, and some appear to have stayed put. At the same time, Alan Lieberman, of the Zoological Society of San Diego’s Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species, along with his colleagues at Hawaii’s KeauhouBird ConservationCenter, have bred palila in captivity and released 15 of the birds in the northern habitat. Though some died or disappeared, Lieberman says, the survivors appear to be acting like wild palila, and at least one pair is mating. On Mauna Kea’s north side, Banko walks around a forest of 20-foot-high mamane mixed with an occasional koa and sandalwood tree. Over a hand-held radio, he receives a report from one of his field researchers: there are five palila in a tree half a mile away. The tree stands in the middle of what the researchers have dubbed “palila paradise,” where they’ve spotted 20 of the birds. “I think the palila will colonize this area,” Banko says, but he acknowledges it might take decades to build a community that won’t need to be supplemented with captive-bred or relocated birds. He spots a female palila flitting in and out of the mamane tree. Everybody spies her activity through binoculars. After a few minutes, it’s obvious what she is doing: building a nest.
A Clown Makes a Comeback
SOUTHERN SEA OTTER
Status: Threatened
Year listed: 1977
Skill: Uses tools (rocks, shellfish) to obtain food
Hundreds of thousands of sea otters once ranged from Baja California to northern Alaska and across the Bering Strait to Russia and Japan. The animal was thought to have been eliminated from the California coast in the early 20th century, despite a 1911 international treaty that protected sea otters from the fur trade. In 1938, biologists made a startling announcement almost like that of the recent ivory-billed woodpecker’s rediscovery: up to several hundred animals were living near Big Sur. With that news, a rocky conservation success story began unfolding.
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