The Province

Cluster of goshawks worth saving

Haida Gwaii’s northern raptors one of most endangered organisms on the planet, says study

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Haida Gwaii’s population of northern goshawks are the last remnant of a highly distinct genetic cluster of the birds, a new study by University of B.C. researcher­s has found.

Researcher­s estimate the population of birds may have been evolving separately on Haida Gwaii for 20,000 years — right around the last time the glaciers melted, causing the sea levels to rise and potentiall­y separating the birds from their kin.

While the birds can fly long distances — with goshawks from Michigan and Manitoba travelling as far away as the central U.S. — they don’t seem to like travelling over water, which could account for their long-term isolation, said study co-lead Armando Geraldes.

“There don’t seem to be strong geographic barriers anywhere on the continent but then you get that body of water — about 70 kilometres of water between Haida Gwaii and the mainland — and that is apparently enough to isolate that population,” he said.

Only 50 of the raptors are left on the archipelag­o.

Their darker colour is a pattern that’s seen in a number of different birds in more humid environmen­ts, said the paper’s senior author, Darren Irwin.

“There are a number of theories why that is, but we are not really sure why,” he said. “It is a bit of a mystery.”

Geraldes said the goshawks aren’t only different in the way they look, their genome is quite distinct, too.

Irwin said scientists think that the group of goshawks found in Haida Gwaii is geneticall­y adapted to the forest environmen­t where they live.

“The darkness and other traits that we don’t know about ... that enables them to live well in that forest.”

Adults are grey and white in colour with golden talons, Irwin said, adding that juveniles are brownish.

They have a strong beak and feed on small mammals and birds, he said.

“They are very good flyers, very fast and very agile and they flash through the forest ... turning this way and that way,” Irwin said. “They are used a lot by falconers. They are very charismati­c birds.”

Right now Geraldes said goshawks are fighting for space. They nest in large, oldgrowth forests so one of the concerns is loss of habitat from logging, he said.

Irwin said apart from losing habitat, the birds are also victims of human-animal conflict.

Goshawks hunt chickens and sometimes get caught in wire fencing while at other times they’re killed intentiona­lly, he said.

With its small population size, the genomicall­y distinct Haida Gwaii population can be considered to be one of the most endangered organisms on the planet, the study said.

These animals fill an important ecological role as a top predator, Irwin said, adding that their health reflects the health of the forest.

While the population in the archipelag­o is distinct, these birds are in decline everywhere, and are listed as threatened. Geraldes said it’s important to save the animals to preserve the genetic variabilit­y.

“Because once you lose it, you’ll never regain it,” he said. “Imagine if there’s a very bad winter and they don’t survive.”

Irwin said maybe someday other goshawks will get to the islands, but evidence suggests new arrivals may not fare as well as the longtime residents.

“To get something as welladapte­d as they are might take that long again,” he said. “So we think it’s wise to keep the ones that are there in a healthy state.”

 ?? CAITLIN BLEWETT ?? A northern goshawk feeds on a chicken. A study by UBC researcher­s has found that Haida Gwaii’s population of northern goshawks are the last remnant of a highly distinct genetic cluster of the birds.
CAITLIN BLEWETT A northern goshawk feeds on a chicken. A study by UBC researcher­s has found that Haida Gwaii’s population of northern goshawks are the last remnant of a highly distinct genetic cluster of the birds.

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