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Bloodied albatross. USFWS photo. |
The mysterious vampire mice of Midway Atoll have left
hundreds of adult Laysan albatross dead, their necks torn open in garish bloody
wounds.
These mice are doing something no mice anywhere else in the world are
known to do.
Late at night, they climb the necks of nesting seabirds and
chew through the skin, apparently feeding on the birds’ blood, skin, fat and muscle.
The albatross’ commitment to protecting their eggs is so strong that they will shake their heads, but will
not leave the nests even with a predatory rodent chewing on them.
And the problem has grown since it was first spotted in 2015.
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Wildlife officials assess injured Laysan albatross. Credit: USFWS |
“It is horribly destructive what they do to those birds,”
said Matt Brown, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service superintendent for the Papahānaumokuākea
Marine National Monument, which includes Midway.
The Fish and Wildlife Service has teamed up with a number of
agencies and now hopes to eradicate the mice, which are an alien species to Midway. Among the 10 major atolls, reefs and islets of the Northwestern
Hawaiian Islands, mice only occur on Sand Island, one of the three specks of
dry land within Midway Atoll.
The mice have been here at least since World War II, but the
new vampirish behavior is both new to Midway and apparently new to science.
Mice are known to take eggs and nestlings of seabirds elsewhere, but only on
Midway do they attack large adult birds.
“This isn’t a behavior that has been observed before,
although rodents have been responsible for a number of seabird extinctions and
extirpations on islands,” said Megan Nagel, public affairs officer for the Fish
and Wildlife Service in Honolulu.
A Fish and Wildlife Service fact sheet quoted Midway Atoll
Refuge manager Bob Peyton: “The Service is working against the clock to
determine how many birds have been attacked, what the rate of spread is, and
how to stop the attacks. Albatrosses lay only one egg a season.”
The proposal they’ve come up with is to try to eradicate the
mice. New Zealand just completed a successful five-year effort to remove mice
from the Antipodes Islands, where they were feeding on chicks and eggs of seabirds,
apparently including the Wandering Albatross, whose 10 to 11-foot wingspan
makes it one of the biggest of birds.
The Midway approach will be similar to the one used at the
Antipodes: a helicopter drop of toxic bait pellets during a period when the
nesting seabird population is at its lowest. That’s also similar to the technique that has been
used to remove mice from more than 80 other islands and to remove rats from
more than 400 islands around the world.
In Hawai`i it’s much like the system that was used to eradicate Pacific
rats from Mokapu Island off Molokai and black rats from Mokoli`i off O`ahu, and
which has been used to control rats at Lehua Island off Ni`ihau, a process that
is still underway.
Rats were eradicated from Midway’s three islets in 1996.
The environmental assessment for the Midway mouse effort, under the name Midway Seabird
Protection Project, describes the issues and the proposed solution. The public comment for the environmental assessment is open
through April 20.
The helicopter would achieve a uniform islandwide
distribution of specially designed bait pellets that contain the anticoagulant
Brodifacoum. Some hand distribution will be employed in sensitive areas such as
near the shore. The work would be done in the summer of 2019, during a period
when seabirds are comparatively scarce on the island, and when dry weather
limits mouse food supplies—making the grain-based bait pellets more appealing.
There are a number of reasons to use a helicopter, including
assuring an even bait distribution but also foot traffic in many areas would collapse many of the thousands of nesting burrows of Bonin Petrels, which
recovered strongly after rats were removed.
Similar eradication efforts on other islands have usually
but not always been successful. In recent years, the success rate has gone up
with improvements in technique. The environmental assessment reviews
alternative approaches, and looks at the option of doing nothing at all. The Brodifacoum bait delivered by helicopter
at the right time of year, in specific amounts over time, as described in the
proposal, is viewed as the best alternative.
The project is estimated to cost $3.5 million. It is not yet
clear the source of that money. Many previous eradications have been funded
through a combination of government funds, grants from foundations, and money
from private institutions like conservation groups.
The Fish and Wildlife Service would be the lead operational
agency, with technical support and assistance from Island Conservation and the
Midway Restoration Partnership Group. This is a collaboration of the Fish and
Wildlife Serfvice and Island Conservation as well as American Bird Conservancy,
the National Wildlife Research Center of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Agency, U.S Geological Survey and the state Office of Hawaiian
Affairs.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2018
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What's at risk :Midway albatross colony. Credit: USFWS. |
3 comments:
Mice attacking albatrosses is not new to science - mice have caused the same problems on other islands including Gough and Marion.
Issues on Marion in the Indian Ocean's Prince Edward Islands and Gough in the South Atlantic's Tristan de Cunha Islands were mouse attacks on chicks. Before this, there have not been documented cases of multiple attacks on adult albatross.
Isn't there anything that be done to help the situation in the interim? This is so devestating. :(
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