Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Experts want protection for American Flamingos

Zoo Miami has partnered with the Tropical Audubon Society, the Cape Florida Banding Station, the Florida Keys Audubon Society, Brevard Zoo and other organizati­ons and scientists to help protect the bright pink birds.

- By Howard Cohen Miami Herald

The American Flamingo has been such an iconic image that has been used to represent Florida for so long — from the Greetings From Florida postcards of the last century to the opening credits of “Miami Vice” in the mid-1980s — one might be excused for thinking the birds are classified as native species and protected.

But that isn’t the case of the only flamingo species native to the United States.

American Flamingos have never been considered as a focal species for conservati­on, management or monitoring in Florida, according to a group of researcher­s, including from Zoo Miami, Cape Florida Banding Station and Big Cypress National Preserve. Zoo Miami’s Steven Whitfield led the research.

So Zoo Miami has partnered with the Tropical Audubon Society, the Cape Florida Banding Station, the Florida Keys Audubon Society, Brevard Zoo and other organizati­ons and scientists to help protect the bright pink birds.

The South Florida researcher­s submitted a petition to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission to consider changing the present classifica­tion of the American Flamingo as a “non-native species” to a “native species.” This designatio­n by the FWC would make the American Flamingo considered a “species of special concern” or “threatened” and lead to their protection and help conserve the population.

According to Zoo Miami spokesman Ron Magill, the researcher­s cited more than 60 published reports and gathered scientific data to indicate that the American Flamingo “did indeed historical­ly nest and reproduce in Florida.”

In February, a comprehens­ive study published in the American Ornitholog­ical Society’s journal The Condor finally provided an answer to a century-old debate: Flamingos are likely natives, though their footprint in Florida is as light as their hot pink feathers. The study was written by Antonio Pernas, a botanist for the Big Cypress National Preserve, with Zoo Miami’s Whitfield and Frank Ridgely, Audubon Florida’s Pete Frezza and Jerry Lorenz, and biologists Anne Mauro and Judd Patterson.

Before his death in 1851, ornitholog­ist John James Audubon observed the American Flamingo in the Florida Keys. Large flocks foraged in the Keys and Florida Bay and could have numbered in the thousands but were almost wiped out by 1900 as they were hunted for food and for their plumes.

Today, estimates suggest the number of American Flamingos has apparently at no time exceeded 500 individual­s between 1903 and 2015, according to Whitfield’s research. The largest group of individual­s recorded in Florida since 1902 was a flock of 147 individual­s that appeared in Stormwater Treatment Area 2 in Palm Beach County in the spring of 2014.

The greatest number of individual flamingos in Florida Bay was a flock of 65 observed in January 1998. “Many habitats used by flamingos are remote,” Whitfield’s research noted.

Across the Caribbean, the total number of individual­s has been estimated between 260,000 and 330,000, with the largest nesting colonies in Cuba and Grand Inagua in the Bahamas, according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The largest nesting area in Cuba, at Humedal Rio Maximo Camagüey, had between 22,000 and 51,600 nesting pairs from 1998 to 2008, but Hurricane Ike in September 2008 devastated the nesting site and destroyed its research center.

Aside from its cameo two-seconds into the “Miami Vice” credits for five seasons, which featured the flamingos at Hialeah Park’s race track, the flamingo has been a cultural staple.

There’s the Flamingo Hotel and Casino Las Vegas, the Flamingo Visitors Center in Homestead, Flamingo Park in South Beach, and the bird’s name and shocking pink coloring is adorned on countless buildings across the country.

“As a cultural icon of Florida and an important component of Florida’s natural heritage, we expect there is broad public support for conservati­on of American Flamingos,” Whitfield and his team of researcher­s said in its petition to the FWC.

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