How Two Secretive Seabirds Evaded the Endangered Species List

Here鈥檚 something to celebrate: After biologists restored their nesting islands, Scripps鈥檚 and Guadalupe Murrelets don't need federal protection.

On December 1, 1853, the paddle-wheel steamer Winfield Scott ran aground near Anacapa Island off the southern California coast. All 400 human passengers swam safely to shore. So did a legion of stowaway rats.

Meanwhile, 350 miles south, whalers and seal trappers periodically left goats on Guadalupe Island to establish a reliable source of meat. A few cats snuck off the ships and followed the goat herds onto land, too.

Like Anacapa and Guadalupe, most of the dozens of small islands off the Pacific coast from southern California down to Baja California, Mexico have their own story of how non-native mammals鈥攔ats, cats, goats, sheep, rabbits, or pigs鈥攔eached their shores. Wherever they landed, the introduced mammals bred unchecked and wreaked ecological havoc on their new homes. The invasive predators hit Scripps鈥檚 and Guadalupe Murrelets, which nest on some of the islands, particularly hard. Rats ate their eggs, goats chomped through bushes hiding their nests, and cats prowled for stray chicks.

鈥淚鈥檝e personally seen chicks that had been chewed on and died from rat predation,鈥 says Anna Weinstein, director of 爆料公社 California鈥檚 seabird and marine program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an ugly sight.鈥

A century after introduced mammals overran the islands, scientists finally led a proper census of the murrelets in the 1990s. It's not an easy task: The birds spend the majority of their lives at sea alone or in small groups, and they often nest in the inaccessible nooks and crannies of steep cliffs to avoid the introduced predators. Even seasoned birders grow excited at the prospect of observing one of the birds, which sometimes requires taking a small skiff out to the islands and climbing rocks at night.

What the scientists found worried them: They counted only a few thousand murrelets, and those that survived were surrounded by and defenseless against predators.

They became more alarmed when oil companies planned to drill offshore of nearby Long Beach and San Diego. So in 2002, the 鈥攁 group of seabird researchers and conservationists鈥攑etitioned the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) to consider listing the murrelets as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.鈥

But they didn鈥檛 wait to hear back from the agency before getting to work to protect the birds. Over the two last decades, an alliance of U.S. and Mexican environmental groups and government agencies鈥攊ncluding the National Park Service, 爆料公社 California, Island Conservation, and the Grupo de Ecolog铆a y Conservaci贸n de Islas鈥攔amped up removal and restoration programs on the offshore islands. Anacapa Island rats were targeted with custom-made poison pellets sprinkled by helicopters, and conservationists replanted native vegetation. Other introduced mammals such as rabbits, pigs, and sheep were either shot from above or trapped by hand on both Guadalupe and San Benito islands, the only known breeding sites for the Guadalupe Murrelet.

Killing animals is never an easy decision, says David Mazurkiewicz, a biologist with Channel Islands National Park. But considering what鈥檚 at stake, it's sometimes a necessary evil. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really talking about the extinction of species,鈥 he says of the murrelets. On Guadalupe Island alone, several terrestrial landbirds鈥攊ncluding the Guadalupe Bewick's Wren, Guadalupe Spotted Towhee, and Guadalupe Caracara鈥攈ave already gone extinct from invasive predation and impact.

The conservationists鈥 hard work has paid off. On September 21, USFWS . Not because their populations are expanding鈥攊ndeed, only a few thousand breeding-age birds of each species remain. Rather, it's because "the stressors impacting the species have either been eliminated or reduced to the point" where there was no indication that the birds were at threat of extinction, the agency wrote. On the four islands that host 80 percent of the Scripps's Murrelet breeding population, no introduced mammals remain; on Guadalupe and San Benito islands, the only known breeding grounds for Guadalupe Murrelets, introduced non-predator mammals have been entirely removed. As a result, many native plants have returned and scientists expect the murrelets to recover.

鈥淲atching the islands rebound like they have has been mind-blowing,鈥 says biologist Robert McMorran with USFWS. 鈥淪eeing the land reclaiming itself is that immediate reward we all seek and don鈥檛 often get.鈥

Federico M茅ndez-S谩nchez, development director with Mexico鈥檚 Grupo de Ecolog铆a y Conservaci贸n de Islas, recalls the satisfaction his colleagues expressed upon watching the 鈥減uffy little birds鈥 running off Guadalupe Island cliffs into the sea. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really amazing to see the murrelets thriving,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a fantastic collaboration.鈥

The work on Guadalupe Island was Mexico鈥檚 first big attempt at restoring an island's native wildlife. But the work isn鈥檛 done, M茅ndez-S谩nchez warns: Feral cats still stalk native prey there. His team recently erected an 800-foot-long fence along its southern edge to keep the cats out and entice murrelets to breed on the main island, instead of its craggy islets. He estimates that it will take another $4 million to trap or kill the entire cat population, which at its peak reached 1,000 animals.

As murrelet monitoring continues, scientists are also keeping a close eye on other bird species affected by mammal invasions on islands throughout the Pacific鈥攃ormorants, herons, shearwaters, auklets, and especially Ashy Storm-Petrels, which have . To survive, they need a level playing field against the feisty introduced predators. 鈥淪eabirds are really responsive to island conservation,鈥 says 爆料公社鈥檚 Weinstein. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e really tough. You give them a chance, and they come back.鈥