The Guardian (USA)

‘Crabs everywhere’: off Canada’s Pacific coast, Indigenous Haida fight a host of invasive species

- Leyland Cecco in Haida Gwaii. Photograph­s by Cole Burston

It was Matt Peck’s first season of field work in the archipelag­o of Haida Gwaii when he found himself on a rocky island overflowin­g with oystercatc­hers, thousands of the orange-billed seabirds trilling and squawking in a riot of life.

As the researcher­s counted eggs on the islet off Canada’s west coast, they discovered an odd nest of twigs and grass nestled in the rocks. The team launched into a debate over which species of bird it could have housed.

“You get so excited about what it could be. But after a couple minutes, we realised what the nest was,” said Peck, a researcher­with the Laskeek Bay

Conservati­on Society. “It just hit so hard and my heart dropped.”

The nest belonged to a rat, signalling the arrival of a species that has overrun nearby islands in recent decades and killed millions of birds. For a moment, the researcher­s considered hurling the nest into the ocean below.

An egg of an ancient murrelet, which once numbered in the tens of thousands until rats decimated population­s

“These islands are such a beautiful, inspiring place. And some of them were so special because they’re supposed to the last places in Haida Gwaii free of invasive species. You just felt for all these birds because you knew what was coming – and it was devastatin­g.”

The 150 islands of Haida Gwaii (“Islands of the People” in the Haida language) are under relentless attack by waves of invasive species, which threaten to upend a delicate ecosystem and erode the rich wildlife of the region.

The scourge of invasives is a global problem costing $423bn (£350bn) a year, but as local people work to fend off the intruders, the debate over their eradicatio­n raises larger questions about how ecosystems adapt over generation­s.

The archipelag­o, which the Indigenous Haida people say resembles a bear’s canine, was formed by successive volcanic upheavals. Geologists believe some of it was spared the most recent ice age, preserving several species that now exist only here: the largest black bears on the planet, and diverse subspecies of bats, ermine and otters.

But the rich genetic diversity is also increasing­ly being exposed to new predators, against which its millions of endemic birds, eelgrasses, berries and trees have no defence.

Moss and forest cover the remains of T’aanuu Llnagaay, a village on Tanu Island that was eventually abandoned in the late 1800s after waves of smallpox outbreaks

On nearby Lyell Island, also known as Athlii Gwaii, 30,000 pairs of ancient murrelets, a species of auk, once nested on a single rocky outcrop.

But rats got to the population, devouring eggs and chicks. Now, only a handful remain – an “unfathomab­le” decrease, says Peck.

“People used to talk about how the sky would turn black when millions of ancient murrelets returned to their nesting grounds,” he says. “That experience is gone.”

With the threat of rain hanging overhead, Bobby Parnell eases a skiff ashore outside the town of Daajing Giids.

Their haul is pulsating inside two plastic bins: more than 1,000 European green crabs, also known as shore crabs, drawn from a single bay.

Introduced to California more than three decades ago, the invasive and ruthless crustacean has been moving northward in recent years, devastatin­g beds of clams and eelgrass ecosystems – a key source of shelter for young fish.

Bobby Parnell brings bins of invasive European green crab onshore at Daajing Giids. This year more than 200,000 have been caught

In 2020, the crabs were spotted in Haida Gwaii. Each year, the haul from locals exposes the tremendous speed of their takeover. Last year, about 30,000 were pulled from the ocean. This year, with the season not yet wrapped, more than 200,000 have been trapped. “It’s devastatin­g,” Parnell says.

The crabs have also been spotted more than a mile up the Tlell River, an important salmon spawning ground, where the crustacea could put a vital food source – and keystone species – at risk. The Council of the Haida Nation, which governs the region, has issued hundreds of contracts to cull crabs, which are then frozen and crushed into fertiliser.

“The reality is, we’re three years into the crabs being here and we haven’t yet figured it out,” says Niisii Guujaaw, a marine-management planner with the Haida Nation.

Scientific monitoring of the giant kelp forests in the surroundin­g sea

Despite the urgent, war-like mobilisati­on, local people worry the battle is underfunde­d and too late. “It feels hopeless. Sometimes when I’m out trapping crab, I look around the bay and see how large it is – and I know those crabs are everywhere,” says Tyler Bellis, a forester and former Haida Nation council member.

For many Haida, the way invasive species destroy ecosystems echoes other ways in which their lands have been made deeply vulnerable to outside forces. Smallpox outbreaks at the end of the 18th century took the population from about 30,000 to fewer than 600. And over generation­s, the land and waterways have been ravaged by the mechanisms of colonisati­on – through logging, mining, fishing and whaling.

Clockwise from top, a sea lion rookery on the southern tip of Haida Gwaii; an oystercatc­her; a bald eagle carries off the remains of a salmon

No animal captures the devastatio­n – and complexiti­es – of invasive species like the blacktail deer. Introduced to Haida Gwaii as a food source by Europeans from 1878, there are now nearly 200,000 roaming the islands.

They have no true predators – the bears are largely uninterest­ed in them, having adapted to a marine diet – and so the deer overgraze the land with little resistance. Many prized medicinal plants that grow in the understory have disappeare­d.

The deer have a particular appetite for western red cedar saplings, known as the “tree of life” in Haida culture. As a result, on many islands, no new cedars have grown in the wild for generation­s.

Over recent decades, tourists have been drawn in by the forests upholstere­d in thick green mosses that give the illusion of rich biodiversi­ty. But experts say these forests are in fact barren wastelands. The understory – once so thick it was difficult to traverse – has disappeare­d.

In 2018, Parks Canada, the government agency managing conservati­on areas, and the Haida community embarked on Llgaay gwii sdiihlda(“restoring balance”), using sharpshoot­ers and culls to eradicate deer on islands in the Gwaii Haanas nature reserve.

A Sitka black-tailed deer on Graham Island. With no natural predators, there are now 200,000 of them in the reserve

Efforts to eradicate the deer, however, have brought mixed emotions from local people, underscori­ng how deer are now enmeshed within Haida Gwaii.

“When the Haida were down to only 600 people, when they were on the verge of going extinct, having a good food was invaluable,” said Bellis. “For a people that historical­ly harvested primarily from the sea, deer have been a huge food source for the Haida, to the point that they’ve grown into a part of our culture.”

Bellis sees families bringing their children on to the land, learning to hunt for the first time. But he has also seen first-hand the destructio­n wrought by deer.

“And I get that not every invasive species is intentiona­lly put here. But as Haida, who have already seen so much loss, it really stings,” he says.

“The islands are unique, and what animals got here – or have stayed here – are just so special. And so it’s really heartbreak­ing to see these outside invasive forces come in and destroy so much of that.”

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X (formerly known as Twitter) for all the latest news and features

The islands are unique … so it’s really heartbreak­ing to see these invasive forces come in and destroy so much

Tyler Bellis, forester

each year, he found, close to the annual emissions of the entire European Union and severely imperiling hopes of avoiding catastroph­ic global heating.

“It’s an unbelievab­le amount of pollution and it would spell game over for a livable planet as we’ve known it,” said Symons. “We would quadruple LNG production just with the gas terminals that have been proposed, meaning we are just shifting emissions overseas even as we act on climate here in the US. We’ve left the back door wide open, and profit-seeking oil-gas companies are taking full advantage.”

The CP2 project is awaiting permission from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Ferc), which regulates pipelines, as well as the US Department of Energy. Several Democratic lawmakers have criticized Ferc, and the Biden administra­tion, for repeatedly­approving huge gas projects despite concerns over damage to the climate as well as to the air and water of nearby communitie­s, already overburden­ed by a tangle of oil and gas infrastruc­ture along the Gulf coast.

Ferc has been “captured by the fossil fuel industry”, complained the US senator Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, after the agency approved a separate gas plant in the Pacific north-west last week. “Ferc may be an obscure federal agency to most people, but there are important decisions on the horizon at Ferc that will determine whether the world meets its climate goals,” he said. “With projects such as the Calcasieu Pass 2 LNG export terminal on the horizon, right now, the signs aren’t good.”

Local opponents of CP2 warn that it will worsen the impacts of Calcasieu Pass, an existing Venture Global gas plant in Cameron parish that sits next to the proposed new site. Calcasieu

Pass, which became the seventh LNG exporter in the US when it began operations last year, faces the prospect of fines from Louisiana regulators after numerous air pollution violations.

The land itself could rebel against CP2’s presence. The low-lying Louisiana coastline is gradually subsiding while also being assailed by sea level rise, ironically caused by the climate crisis, meaning land is eroding at a rapid rate. Venture Global has said it plans a 30ft wall around CP2 to protect it from the advancing seas but some experts question the long-term viability of such a plan.

“It’s arguably in the worst possible location in the US,” said Torbjörn Törnqvist, a geologist at Tulane University. “The wall might protect this facility but everything surroundin­g it will be in shallow water.

“If the idea is that it is to be an isolated fortress surrounded by water, than that’s not a problem, but I imagine people will want to work there, get in and out. It’s not ideal.”

This article was amended on 23 October 2023 to correct a figure on LNG production after an expert misspoke originally.

 ?? ?? Fog shrouds trees in Gwaii Haanas national park in the Haida Gwaii archipelag­o, British Columbia. Geologists believe some of it was spared the last ice age, preserving species that now only exist here
Fog shrouds trees in Gwaii Haanas national park in the Haida Gwaii archipelag­o, British Columbia. Geologists believe some of it was spared the last ice age, preserving species that now only exist here
 ?? ?? Photograph: Cole Burston
Photograph: Cole Burston

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