Humans are great at remaking environments by bringing new
species in, but recently they’ve had a little success at reversing the process.
Bird-eating alien rats have now been removed from islands in
many cases, plant-destroying rabbits as well, and recently, invasive birds
have been targeted.
(Image: Atiu in the Cook Islands is nearly free of aggressive, invasive mynah birds. Credit: Google Maps.)
Off Hawai`i, rabbits
have been removed and rat removal has
been underway from Lehua Islet off Niihau.
In Alaska,
an island once so infested that its formal name
became Rat Island, is going back to its native name after the removal of the
rats.
.
But what about invasive birds?
On the small island of Atiu in the Cook Islands, about 3,000
miles directly south from Hawai`i, they’ve taken to eradicating mynah birds.
The Indian mynah was brought into the islands of the Pacific
for insect control—and they’re good at it. They’ve controlled army worms on
Hawaiian lawns, and coconut stick insects on Pacific islands where the coconut
pests have been prevalent.
Recently, after Atiu residents viewed images of mynahs
pulling endangered Rimatara lorikeet chicks out of their nests and saw
mynahs attacking lorikeets in flight, they launched a mynah eradication.
The birds locally are known as Kura. This lorikeet is a rare, gorgeous bird whose bright red
feathers were important culturally. It was reintroduced to Atiu after being gone from the island for two centuries, but was doing poorly in part because of the mynah.
Atiu residents, with the help of experts, have
removed more than 30,000 and they feel the end is near. On the other hand, the survivors are the birds most evasive and wary of traps. At last report from Cook Islands capitol Rarotonga, the mynah population was down to about 50 "real smart mynahs."
But of course, the coconut stick
insect—also an introduction—is back in force.Apparently, there is some hope for control of the insect, as
another native bird, a kingfisher, has added coconut stick insects to its
diet.
Australia is also aiming to control mynah populations. The aggressive introduced birds have outcompeted many native birds for food, nesting sites.
One of the Australian catch phrases: You can have native birds or Indian mynahs, but not both.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2015
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