Miami Herald

State pulls Keys’ ospreys from endangered animals list

- BY JENNY STALETOVIC­H jstaletovi­ch@miamiheral­d.com

The Florida Keys’ ospreys, the fierce fish hawks whose massive nests dot utility poles, channel markers and nesting platforms up and down the ribbon of islands, will no longer be listed as an imperiled species by the state.

State wildlife officials announced Monday that a rare resident population of the migratory birds in Monroe County had been removed from the list in December after a yearlong review found the number of birds rising statewide. While some have argued the Keys’ clan should be classified as their own subspecies, state wildlife officials said there’s no evidence that the ospreys are geneticall­y distinct. It’s still illegal to kill the birds, but the designatio­n means fewer rules for developers.

Conservati­onists welcomed the reported increase. Three decades ago after a seagrass die-off created a 100-square mile dead zone across Florida Bay oozing pea-green algae, the population plummeted. But they worry about stripping protection­s while the bay’s health remains fragile after a similar seagrass die-off three years ago.

“The scary thing is we just had a big seagrass dieoff followed by algae blooms. This is the same process that led to the declines of the osprey in the ’80s and ’90s,” said Jerry Lorenz, state research director for Audubon Florida. “So I’m going to remain optimistic, but I’m also going to say let’s wait and see.”

In 2015, the seagrass die-off blanketed 62 square miles in the bay, triggered by a seasonal drought and compounded by decades of flood control that has choked off the supply of fresh water from the north. Lorenz pointed out that seagrass is recovering faster than it did after the 1980s and early ’90s crash, when it took 20 years. Algae blooms have been smaller and more sporadic. Water management has also improved as efforts to restore water flows through Everglades restoratio­n work progresses. But the bay remains vulnerable.

“It’s pretty clear we’re still in crisis mode,” said attorney Jaclyn Lopez, the Florida director for the Center for Biological Diversity. “By removing protection­s, we’re potentiall­y losing resources.”

The last time the bay crashed, the birds vanished quickly. Lorenz, who has monitored roseate spoonbills and other wading birds in the bay for 30 years, remembers passing a string of nests along a mile-long stretch on his way to visit tiny mangrove islands where wading birds nest. “First there were 14 nests, then 12 then nine,” he said. “Then there were three, then two and then none.”

Scientists think that as fish disappeare­d, the birds became vulnerable. Lorenz said numbers around the Keys have still not rebounded to what they were before they crashed. Florida also provides a major winter home for nesting ospreys, with about 20 percent of the U.S. population outside Alaska nesting in the state.

 ?? Miami Herald file ?? The massive nests of Florida Keys’ ospreys dot utility poles.
Miami Herald file The massive nests of Florida Keys’ ospreys dot utility poles.

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