Ryan Carle could use a nap. Bleary and hunched on a boat dock, he sounds nearly defeated. 鈥淚t鈥檚 feeling like a bit of a boondoggle,鈥 he tells me, not much louder than Mono Lake lapping beneath us. Carle, science director for the nonprofit research group Oikonos Ecosystem Knowledge, has gathered a small team of scientists in his tiny hometown of Lee Vining, California, at the eastern base of the Sierra Nevada, with a clear purpose: to catch phalaropes. They鈥檝e been at it for a week. Nothing doing.
This morning they tried two new techniques. Carle set out in one boat with Margaret Rubega, a University of 颅Connecticut ornithologist, to deploy a contraption built with an old window frame that Carle pilfered from his parents鈥 garage. The DIY device is meant to float and snare swimming phalarope feet in loops of fishing line.
I squeezed into the other boat, where Sydney Miller, a graduate student who studies the dainty shorebirds at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, tested a different innovation: She tossed a revolting hunk of frozen sludge over the gunwale鈥攂rine fly larvae and brine shrimp. 鈥淵our hands are going to stink for so many days,鈥 Kiki Tarr, an ecologist at , informed her. The hope was that the bait鈥檚 stench would draw birds near enough that Miller could net one while Tarr maneuvered the boat. But the phalaropes paid it no mind. The lake was lousy with the tiny invertebrates.
When everyone regrouped after a few hours, Carle鈥檚 eyes were red. The floating trap sank, he said, and he had swum to the bottom of the salty, alkaline lake to retrieve it. Back to the drawing board.
It is the first week of August, a period the team chose for good reason: Typically during this time, Red-necked and Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes are fattening up to power their fall migration. They should be pudgy, slow鈥攏ettable. Instead, they鈥檙e so svelte that the whole enterprise seems hopeless.
The researchers aren鈥檛 sure why, but when it comes to phalaropes, there鈥檚 plenty that scientists don鈥檛 know. Filling those gaps is the purpose of the , which arose from a gathering Carle and Rubega convened at Mono Lake in 2019. The partnership aims to shed new light on key questions one might assume had been resolved already, such as how many phalaropes there are and where they travel during migration. This summer, the team attached the first radio transmitters to 15 Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes, males whose devotion to protecting their nests in Saskatchewan made them relatively easy to catch. Only two of the tags have provided helpful data, so today鈥檚 aim was to tag birds at Mono Lake and see where they went next.
Of the three phalarope species, the Wilson鈥檚 fate seems most precarious. That鈥檚 because the bird depends almost entirely on the survival of saline lakes. In some cases more than eight times as salty as the oceans, these ancient, otherworldly water bodies thrum with life adapted to extremes. Utah鈥檚 Great Salt Lake has in some years hosted more than half a million Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes preparing to migrate south. When summer arrives in South America, comparable numbers gather at Laguna Mar Chiquita, Argentina鈥檚 largest saline lake. Healthy habitats on one continent are not enough to sustain the species; they depend on salt lakes across the Americas. 鈥淭his ecosystem web of saline lakes is absolutely essential and irreplaceable for a species like Wilson鈥檚 Phalarope,鈥 says Marcelle Shoop, director of 爆料公社鈥檚 Saline Lakes Program.
These vital ecosystems around the world. People withdraw water from their sources, mainly to grow crops in arid environments. Climate change adds stress and unpredictability, even to well-protected lakes like Mono. And as go the lakes, so go Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes; based on its research, the working group slashed a longstanding estimate of the global population by one-third.
This is why Carle feels such pressure to succeed. He鈥檚 been running flat out the past few days, chasing and counting phalaropes on the sun-blasted lake, washing the salt-encrusted boats, and visiting local brine shrimpers to beg buckets of bait. Only a few days remain before the team must scatter to other obligations, so Carle is coming to accept that they鈥檒l have to do what he considers a last resort: netting the phalaropes at night. It will be difficult and a little dangerous, but he鈥檚 captured seabirds after dark before. He feels they鈥檝e got to try.
With the data he hopes to get, Carle is trying to tell the world a story about saline lakes and the birds that need them. Time is running out, not just for the team but also for phalaropes themselves. 鈥淪tories are what get people to act,鈥 he says. And action is what the birds need.
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flock of phalaropes in flight is among Earth鈥檚 great wildlife spectacles. A lucky visitor to a saline lake may see thousands of Red-necked or Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes in a single, 颅sinuous mass. Then, with a sound like a billowing sail, they tack as one, the smoky swarm whitening as they flash their chalky bellies.
On paper, however, phalaropes are a mess. These shorebirds are found only occasionally along shorelines and instead feed mostly while swimming. Too buoyant for serious diving, they swim in tight circles to create eddies that draw food toward the surface. 鈥淚f you were designing a waterbird, you would not start with a shorebird body,鈥 Rubega says. 鈥淭he plan is all wrong.鈥 Red and Red-necked 颅Phalaropes may as well be seabirds: They breed in the Arctic and spend the rest of the year mostly on the open ocean. Wilson鈥檚, by contrast, are landlubbers. They breed among shallow wetlands in several western states and provinces, and in June they begin staging for migration at saline lakes. There, in just a few weeks, they molt out of their breeding plumage and eat enough invertebrates to double their weight. Growing new feathers and migrating thousands of miles require scads of calories. 鈥淵ou would arrive, get completely naked, get your weight up close to 400, then grow yourself an entire set of clothes. And do that in a month,鈥 Rubega tells me. 鈥淚t takes a lot of food is my point.鈥
Such strange birds are right at home in some of the planet鈥檚 most bizarre ecosystems. Saline lakes form in closed basins with no outflow; water can exit only through evaporation, which leaves salt and other minerals behind. Many are too salty for fish, frogs, and other freshwater regulars, yet life abounds. 鈥攂etter known as Sea-Monkeys鈥攕quirm innumerably through the water column. Adult brine flies, having encased themselves in that serve as scuba tanks, mill about the lake bed, grazing on bacteria and algae.
For many birds, no other food source can compare. More than 10 million avian visitors stop to feed each year at Great Salt Lake alone, and it is by far the continent鈥檚 most important place for Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes. It is also an ecosystem in crisis. Unsustainable water use, mainly to grow alfalfa and other crops, has taken more than two-thirds of its historic inflow. The lake鈥檚 water level set a record low in 2021, then broke it a year later. The receding waters caused a mass die-off of reeflike structures called microbialites, which provide an algae buffet for invertebrates and a place for brine flies to anchor their larvae. With less water to dilute minerals, salinity in parts of the lake has spiked so high that brine shrimp could soon die out. A 2023 report warned that, having lost nearly three-quarters of its volume, North America鈥檚 largest saline lake was within five years.
The results would be disastrous. As the lake bed is exposed, dust storms carry heavy metals and particulate pollution to nearby communities, putting residents at greater risk of major health problems, including cancer. Industries dependent on the lake, including a $60 million brine shrimp fishery that supplies aquaculture companies with fish food, would wither. Phalaropes, Eared Grebes, and other birds accustomed to finding sustenance there would have to look elsewhere. 鈥淚t is a little bit of a time bomb,鈥 says Wayne 颅Wurtsbaugh, an expert on saline lakes and retired Utah State University limnologist.
It鈥檚 a catastrophe that birds and people have experienced elsewhere. In 1913 the growing city of Los Angeles began siphoning water from the Owens River through a 233-mile aqueduct. By 1926 Owens Lake, which had not gone dry in at least 800,000 years, was completely desiccated. Once a waterbird paradise, in most years the lake now exists as a series of impoundments, plowed ridges, and gravel fields used by Los Angeles to manage toxic dust鈥攁n obligation expected to cost the city $3.6 billion by 2025 (more than the value of the water the city took, according to one report).
Lake Abert, in Oregon, has historically been among the continent鈥檚 top gathering places for phalaropes, but upstream diversions and hotter, drier conditions caused it to in 2014, 2015, 2021, and 2022鈥攜ears in which the usual masses of phalaropes and Eared Grebes never materialized. 鈥淭here鈥檚 less habitat, plus there鈥檚 less food available, so it鈥檚 no wonder they don鈥檛 come,鈥 says Ron Larson, a retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist who monitors the lake for . 鈥淚f these birds aren鈥檛 coming to Lake Abert, where are they going? Or are they just dying?鈥
Those are the sorts of questions Carle and the working group are trying to answer. To gain a fuller sense of the birds鈥 movements and population trends, in 2019 the team began coordinating annual surveys at staging areas in California, Oregon, Utah, and Saskatchewan. Encouragingly, suggest that phalaropes are flexible enough to adjust to changing habitat conditions. As Lake Abert鈥檚 bird numbers plunged in 2021, for example, Mono Lake saw its highest count since surveys began. In 2023, when an extremely wet winter made Owens Lake a proper lake for the first time in a century, its bumper crop of brine flies lured a record number of Wilson鈥檚.
There may, however, be limits to the birds鈥 flexibility. When Great Salt Lake was on the brink of collapse in 2022, its phalarope numbers plummeted, but surveys detected no corresponding spike at other sites. Overall, the survey data so far tell a more sobering story. The average number of Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes is roughly half of comparable counts in the 1980s. Just since Carle and his team began their counts, the tally has fallen from 340,000 Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes in 2019 to roughly 74,000 in 2023 (though that year had an unusually high number of unidentified birds; nonbreeding Red-necked and Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes look very similar).
鈥淭his is a really critical period, I think, for these saline-dependent birds,鈥 Larson says. As some of their most crucial gathering places shrivel, the stakes become higher for protecting relatively stable habitats like Mono Lake and Laguna Mar 颅Chiquita. And even these comparatively safe havens are showing serious signs of distress.
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or Carle, this work is intensely personal. 鈥淢ono lake has always been in the background of my psyche,鈥 he says. (Locals pronounce it MOH-no, as it鈥檚 a reference to the area鈥檚 Indigenous inhabitants.) When California created a state reserve there in 1982, Carle鈥檚 parents became its first rangers. A photo from a 1992 Fourth of July parade shows him in a brine fly costume. In another, from 2004, he models a Mono Lake Is for Lovers T-shirt, which he designed as an intern for the nonprofit Mono Lake Committee. These days he lives in Santa Cruz, but he returns to Lee Vining each summer to study phalaropes. 鈥淚 feel a lot of responsibility to do a good job,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 lot of my professional partners I鈥檓 working with are people who have known me since I was a little kid.鈥
Carle鈥檚 deep ties to the Mono Basin aren鈥檛 the only reason he鈥檚 interested in the phalaropes there. It鈥檚 important to understand how they use this habitat, he says, because Mono Lake, four times deeper than Great Salt Lake and better protected, has stronger odds than its counterparts of surviving a changing climate. 鈥淚n a relative sense, we can count on Mono Lake being there for the birds,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd we can鈥檛 count on these other lakes.鈥
Half a century ago, however, this million-year-old lake faced disaster. In 1941 the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power began diverting water from streams that feed Mono Lake, sending it to the city 350 miles south. LADWP took so much water that the lake鈥檚 surface dropped 45 feet, halving its volume and 颅doubling its salinity. The city was on course to deplete Mono Lake as it had Owens.
In 1976, with a mix of concern and curiosity, a scruffy group of college students spent a summer conducting an unprecedented ecological study of the Mono Basin. They found that the area was far more important for birds than anyone had realized. The lake supported more than 700,000 Eared Grebes and as many as 93,000 Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes. It hosted more breeding California Gulls than any place except Great Salt Lake, but the falling water level would soon create a land bridge, allowing predators to reach their main nesting island. And with the lake鈥檚 salinity rising, , brine shrimp and brine flies 鈥渕ay be subject to extinction.鈥
Alarmed, some of those young idealists launched the in 1978 and began rabble-rousing on the lake鈥檚 behalf. By the following year they had convinced the 爆料公社 and others to join them in an audacious gambit: They sued LADWP, the largest municipal utility in the country.
In a , the California Supreme Court found that the state has a duty, under a legal principle known as the public trust doctrine, to protect Mono Lake for people and wildlife. To fulfill that responsibility, the State Water Resources Control Board issued in 1994: LADWP鈥檚 withdrawals would be reined in to help the lake鈥檚 surface elevation reach and remain at 6,392 feet above sea level鈥25 feet lower than before the city鈥檚 diversions, but 20 feet higher than its 1982 low point. Computer modeling indicated that, with the new restrictions, it would reach that target by 2014.
Today the lake . The withdrawal limits prevented ecosystem collapse, but they have proven too lax to bring about the planned recovery, says Geoff McQuilkin, executive director of the Mono Lake Committee. The computer models didn鈥檛 see climate change coming: They couldn鈥檛 predict that, from 2012 to 2016, severe drought would drop Mono Lake鈥檚 elevation by seven feet.
In December 2022, with the region once again in the grip of a multiyear drought, McQuilkin sent the water board urging officials to stop the diversions, which meet no more than 3 percent of the city鈥檚 demand. 鈥淭his water is really valuable in Mono Lake, less valuable in Los Angeles,鈥 he says. LADWP doesn鈥檛 seem to share the sense of urgency. 鈥淲hile lake level rise is not occurring as quickly as originally hoped for,鈥 a department spokesperson wrote to 爆料公社, 鈥渢he Mono Basin is among the most protected of California鈥檚 imported supply source regions and the target lake level will be achieved in time.鈥
鈥淚n time鈥 is not good enough, Mono Lake advocates say; the 1994 ruling was an order, not a recommendation. In it the water board said that if the lake did not reach the target elevation by 2014, it would call a public hearing to determine if changes to LADWP鈥檚 licenses were necessary. Far past the deadline and nowhere near the goal, that has yet to happen. The board told 爆料公社 it plans to hold a hearing but declined to say when.
As the winter of 2022 closed in, Mono Lake had dropped so low that its salinity exceeded Clean Water Act regulations and a land bridge to the gull colony was reemerging. Then snow began to fall鈥攁nd fall. Lee Vining would see a record 19 feet that winter. Deep into summer, snowmelt roared down the mountainside. The influx left the lake well short of the target elevation but raised it enough that the rules will allow the LAWDP to take nearly four times as much water in 2024 as it did in 2023.
That鈥檚 exactly the wrong response to a generous winter, McQuilkin says, and evidence that the rules must be updated to face the reality of climate change. 鈥淲e need to preserve the gains of a wet year, minimize the losses of a dry year,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ne wet year is not a water management plan.鈥
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ell before Carle鈥檚 lesson in the indignities of trying to catch Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes, Marcela Castellino was an expert on the subject. She began researching the birds about a decade ago, but capturing them proved so difficult that she had to put a planned Ph.D. on hold. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e all the time in the water, and it鈥檚 very muddy, and they are very fast,鈥 she says. She tried hand nets, mist nets, nets shot from a cannon her father fabricated, and nets dropped from a drone: 鈥淚 tried every method that you can think of, and I only caught three in four years.鈥
Nevertheless, the work made her an authority on the species, which as far as she knows no one else had seriously studied in Argentina, her home country. She attended the 2019 phalarope meeting at Mono Lake, after which Manomet Conservation Sciences hired her to work on saline lake conservation as part of the . And when Carle needed an austral counterpart to coordinate research in South America, he turned to Castellino.
It was a perfect match. Both scientists were born in 1985. Both want their research to have real-world conservation value. Both spent their childhoods in small towns beside saline lakes鈥擫aguna Mar 颅Chiquita, in Castellino鈥檚 case鈥攁nd return regularly to visit family and count phalaropes. Castellino鈥檚 parents weren鈥檛 park rangers, but such is their love for Mar Chiquita that they gave all three of their daughters names that begin with Mar.
Shortly after Carle started counting Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes at Mono Lake during his summers, Castellino began leading aerial and shore surveys at Mar Chiquita during hers. For now it鈥檚 too soon to draw conclusions from those ongoing efforts, but a related project raised concerns about the bird鈥檚 trajectory. In 2020 Carle, Castellino, and others across South America, from High Andes lagoons to 颅Patagonian wetlands, surveying 753 sites for Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes, many for the first time. Since the 1980s scientists had figured the global 颅population was about 1.5 million. Based on the census, the working group to 1 million.
Of all the South American sites, none compared with Mar Chiquita鈥檚 half a million birds. While Mono Lake rests in a steep-sided bowl, Mar Chiquita sprawls across a landscape so flat that one wonders how the water knows where to pool. It is 14 times larger than Mono Lake but much shallower, and fed by three rivers that crawl across the vast plains of central Argentina鈥檚 C贸rdoba province. Its largest tributary enters at the lake鈥檚 north shore, where vast, remote wetlands are a draw for shorebirds and three flamingo species.
Castellino grew up on Mar Chiquita鈥檚 southern shore in Miramar de Ansenuza, a laid-back tourist town鈥攑alm trees, souvenir shops, Burrowing Owls lazily eyeing passersby鈥攚here the raucous sounds of Great Kiskadees, Southern Lapwings, and Monk Parakeets give way to thumping dance music come nightfall. In December 2022 I joined about a dozen other Americans there for a gathering intended to strengthen the international collaboration that, as Castellino puts it, Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes demand. It was also a celebration: Six months earlier Argentina had established , which encompasses all of Mar Chiquita. The lake鈥檚 importance for Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes, flamingos, and other birds was a major reason for its designation, and the gathering bubbled with optimism that the park will help to protect the lake and grow the region鈥檚 economy through nature-based tourism.
While it took impending disaster to spur the movement to save Mono Lake, here conservation efforts appeared to be ahead of the curve, with plenty of water still in Mar Chiquita. Compared to its North American counterparts, though, Mar Chiquita has not been closely studied. Castellino and others I spoke with shared a sense that no one was exactly sure what shape it was in or what its future might look like. A 1970s spike in precipitation drove the lake to record heights, but the amount siphoned for agriculture also grew. A found that, from 1992 to 2020, half of Mar Chiquita鈥檚 water disappeared. Climate change played a role, but the biggest factor was human consumption.
Mar Chiquita鈥檚 water lacks the kind of legal protection secured for Mono Lake. A watershed committee exists to oversee water use along its tributaries, but it is maddeningly opaque, Castellino says. It hasn鈥檛 been able to provide her with documents she has requested about water use, and she鈥檚 not sure if streamflow gauges are even working. 鈥淲ater levels, what is happening with the invertebrates, what is happening with water quality鈥攚e need that information,鈥 she says.
Without it, it鈥檚 hard to understand the present or plan for the future of this lake where half of all Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes spend the nonbreeding season鈥攅specially as the world grows hotter. In September 2023, as Argentina suffered a historic drought, Castellino emailed me satellite images showing that the lake鈥檚 northern edge had receded dramatically over the past four years, exposing vast tongues of salty earth. 鈥淚鈥檓 very worried,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his could be a really critical situation in a few years if we don鈥檛 pay attention.鈥
I
n 2009 researchers extracted core samples from the bottom of Great Salt Lake. From these columns of sediment they plucked brine shrimp eggs, some more than 200 years old. When the scientists watered the eggs, .
Maybe that鈥檚 a dangerous story. One could conclude that letting saline lakes go dry wouldn鈥檛 be such a big deal. They can bounce right back鈥攋ust add water!鈥攖hough that wouldn鈥檛 help the birds that need food this year, and next year, and the year after that.
But it鈥檚 also a hopeful story, and feeling hopeful is not unreasonable. Mono Lake rose by around five feet in 2023 on the shoulders of that massive snowpack. The water board has not yet scheduled a hearing to reevaluate LADWP鈥檚 licenses, but it did hold a public workshop that February. It was the first formal hearing of its sort since the board鈥檚 1994 decision, McQuilkin says. During , McQuilkin, Carle, Castellino, and many others鈥攕tate wildlife officials, air-quality managers, and the Mono Lake Kutzadika鈥檃 Tribe鈥攗rged the board to take action to protect the lake. 鈥淭hat was a really big deal,鈥 McQuilkin says.
That lavish winter also replenished Lake Abert and Great Salt Lake鈥攏ot a cure but a balm. As the snowmelt petered out last September, environmental and public health groups against state agencies in Utah that was modeled on the Mono Lake suit. Whatever its outcome, Utahns I spoke with say that people are paying attention to the lake in a way that feels new. Last year the legislature formally declared brine shrimp . More substantively, state lawmakers in 2022 put 爆料公社 and The Nature Conservancy in charge of to get more water into the lake. Last year the fund secured 64,000 acre-feet of inflow and issued grants for projects to bolster 13,000 acres of wetlands. Also in 2022, Congress created a new program to coordinate saline lake monitoring across the West.
The phalarope working group, too, has made important strides. A few days after my chat with an exhausted Carle on that dock in Lee Vining, he texted me a photo of a robin-size bird in the glare of a headlamp. The night before, his team had caught two Red-necked Phalaropes. They weren鈥檛 Wilson鈥檚, and the tags Carle planned to deploy didn鈥檛 fit the species鈥 stubbier legs. Still, it was a breakthrough: Shining phalaropes at night seemed to be the key to catching them at their migratory stopovers. A few nights later, using the new intel, U.S. Geological Survey researchers tagged 10 Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes at Tule Lake in Northern California.
Data from those transmitters have already revealed new insights into phalarope movement that could be valuable in conservation. After Tule Lake, the birds visited wetlands in Southern California and Mexico that researchers didn鈥檛 realize were impor颅tant to the species. That they rested there at all was a revelation; conventional wisdom held that most Wilson鈥檚 Phalaropes migrate nonstop to South America.
Last June, as the birds were preparing to fly south, Castellino and other visitors from Argentina traveled north for the inaugural Mono Lake Phalarope Festival. In a park overlooking the lake, Castellino joined Carle in singing a song he wrote called 鈥淢e Llaman Falaropo鈥 (鈥淭hey Call Me Phalarope鈥). 鈥淚 will return; the salt lakes call me,鈥 they sang as he strummed a mandolin, 鈥渁nd my journey never ends.鈥
It might sound corny鈥攁 song doesn鈥檛 put more water in the lake鈥攂ut when I watched later, it moved me. These two scientists, children of two saline lakes on two continents, singing together in their two languages about this one beautiful bird they鈥檝e always known and are just beginning to understand鈥攊t diluted my cynicism just as the runoff then sluicing down the canyons would soften Mono Lake鈥檚 salty edge. 鈥淚 know one day we will protect all of the places I call home,鈥 they sang. Behind them, up in the Sierra, thick slabs of snow still lingered like unopened gifts.
This story originally ran in the Spring 2024 issue as 鈥淢ust Add Water.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .