Santa Fe New Mexican

‘It’s a tragedy’

Protected too late: U.S. officials report more than 20 extinction­s

- By Catrin Einhorn

The ivory-billed woodpecker, which birders have been seeking in the bayous of Arkansas, is gone forever, according to federal officials. So is the Bachman’s warbler, a yellow-breasted songbird that once migrated between the Southeaste­rn United States and Cuba. The song of the Kauai o’o, a Hawaiian forest bird, exists only on recordings. And there is no longer any hope for several types of freshwater mussels that once filtered streams and rivers from Georgia to Illinois.

In all, 22 animals and one plant should be declared extinct and removed from the endangered species list, federal wildlife officials planned to announce Wednesday.

The announceme­nt could also offer a glimpse of the future. It comes amid a worsening global biodiversi­ty crisis that threatens 1 million species with extinction, many within decades. Human activities like farming, logging, mining and damming take habitat from animals and pollute much of what’s left. People poach and overfish. Climate change adds new peril.

“Each of these 23 species represents a permanent loss to our nation’s natural heritage and to global biodiversi­ty,” said Bridget Fahey, who oversees species classifica­tion for the Fish and Wildlife Service. “And it’s a sobering reminder that extinction is a consequenc­e of human-caused environmen­tal change.”

The extinction­s include 11 birds, eight freshwater mussels, two fish, a bat and a plant. Many of them were likely extinct, or almost so, by the time the Endangered Species Act passed in 1973, officials and advocates said, so perhaps no amount of conservati­on would have been able to save them.

“The Endangered Species Act wasn’t passed in time to save most of these species,” said Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit group. “It’s a tragedy.”

Since the passage of the act, 54 species in the United States have been removed from the endangered list because their population­s recovered, while another 48 have improved enough to move from endangered to threatened. So far, 11 listed species have been declared extinct.

A 60-day public comment period on the new batch of 23 begins Thursday. Scientists and members of the public can provide informatio­n they would like the Fish and Wildlife Service to consider before making a final ruling.

Scientists do not declare extinction­s lightly. It often takes decades of fruitless searching. About half of the species in this group were already considered extinct by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature, the global authority on the status of animals and plants. The Fish and Wildlife Service moved slower in part because it is working through a backlog, officials said, and tends to prioritize providing protection for species that need it over removing protection for those that don’t.

Many of the final confirmed sightings were in the 1980s, though one Hawaiian bird was last documented in 1899 and another in 2004.

No animal in the batch has been sought more passionate­ly than the ivory-bill, the largest woodpecker in the United States. Once inhabiting old growth forests and swamps of the Southeast, the birds declined as European settlers and their descendant­s cleared forests and hunted them. The last confirmed sighting was in Louisiana in 1944.

But in 2004, a kayaker named Gene Sparling set off a flurry of searching when he saw a woodpecker that looked like an ivory-bill in an Arkansas swamp. Days after hearing about it, two experience­d birders, Tim Gallagher and Bobby Harrison, flew in to join him on a search. On Day Two, paddling in their kayaks, they were getting ready to stop for lunch when suddenly a big bird flew right in front of them. “Tim and I both yelled ‘Ivory-bill!’ at the same time,” Harrison recalled.

In doing so, they scared the bird away. But the men are adamant that they got a crystal-clear look at the distinctiv­e wing markings that distinguis­h an ivory-bill from its most similar relative, the pileated woodpecker. “It was unmistakab­le,” Gallagher said.

A host of Cornell University ornitholog­ists, several more searches, a few reported sightings and a blurry video later, a 2005 paper in the journal Science declared “Ivory-billed Woodpecker (Campephilu­s principali­s) Persists in Continenta­l North America.”

Controvers­y ensued. Some experts argued that the footage was of pileated woodpecker­s. Repeated attempts by state and federal wildlife agencies to find the bird have been unsuccessf­ul, and many experts have concluded that it is extinct.

When Amy Trahan, a biologist with the Fish and Wildlife Service, completed the most recent species assessment for the woodpecker, she said, she had to make her recommenda­tion based on the best available science. At the end of the report, she checked a line next to the words “delist based on extinction.”

“That was probably one of the hardest things I’ve done in my career,” she said. “I literally cried.”

Islands, where wildlife evolved in isolation, have been especially hit hard by extinction­s caused by humans introducin­g foreign species into the ecosystem, and 11 of the species in the delisting proposal are from Hawaii and Guam. Pigs, goats and deer destroy forest habitat. Rats, mongoose and brown tree snakes prey on native birds and bats. Mosquitoes, which did not exist on Hawaii until they arrived on ships in the 1800s, kill birds by infecting them with avian malaria.

Hawaii was once home to more than 50 species of forest birds known as honeycreep­ers, some of them brightly colored with long, curved beaks used to drink nectar from flowers. Taking into account the proposed extinction­s in this batch, only 17 species are left.

Most of the remaining species are now under heavier siege. Birds that lived higher in the mountains were once safe from avian malaria because it was too cold for mosquitoes. But because of climate change, the mosquitoes have spread higher.

“We’re seeing very dramatic population declines associated with that increase in mosquitoes that’s a direct result of climate change,” said Michelle Bogardus, the deputy field supervisor for the Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Office.

Only a couple of species have shown resistance to avian malaria, she said, so most are likely to face extinction unless mosquitoes can be controlled over the whole landscape.

 ?? CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOG­Y VIA AP ?? This undated image taken from video shows an ivory-billed woodpecker. The U.S. government is declaring the ivory-billed woodpecker and 22 more birds, fish and other species extinct.
CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOG­Y VIA AP This undated image taken from video shows an ivory-billed woodpecker. The U.S. government is declaring the ivory-billed woodpecker and 22 more birds, fish and other species extinct.

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