Rapidly Declining Songbird Won鈥檛 See Federal Protections Anytime Soon

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has delayed its decision on the Saltmarsh Sparrow鈥檚 endangered status to 2023. Scientists say that might be too late.

Greg Shriver and Chris Elphick have spent the last decade agonizing over the Saltmarsh Sparrow鈥檚 extinction. Both ecologists began studying the scrappy, sherbert-faced bird in the mid-2000s to better understand how its nesting habits revolve around the shoreline grasses and ebbing tides of the Atlantic. Both soon realized that their uniquely adapted subject , due to intensifying flooding, predation, and development along its East Coast range.

Elphick and Shriver鈥檚 analyses showed a yearly 9 percent decline in the sparrow鈥檚 population鈥攅nough, they believed, to warrant consideration for federal protections. So, in 2017, they took all the evidence they鈥檇 amassed with the  and made their case with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). The agency agreed  in 2019; but last month it suddenly switched course and said it would put off reviewing the sparrow for an endangered species listing until 2023, according to scientists present at the announcement.

鈥淭he 2023 time will allow us to incorporate additional information about management efforts that are at an early stage,鈥 confirms Meagan Racey, public affairs specialist for USFWS, Northeast Region. She adds that the agency may reconsider the revised schedule if circumstances around the species become more urgent.

The data USFWS is looking for will come from the , an independent network of federal and state wildlife departments, nonprofits like 爆料公社, and researchers like Shriver and Elphick focused on protecting marine marshes and their birds. The initiative, which launched back in 2016, is funded by the agency but holds no clout when it comes to endangered species listings, says Aimee Weldon, its coordinator.

This summer the venture will release an action plan that outlines ways to help Saltmarsh Sparrows cope with sea level rise on . USFWS says it will wrap the venture鈥檚 suggestions, which include building tide gates, digging connector creeks to drain floodwaters, and shaping restoration around shifts in the bird鈥檚 habitat, along with a pending business plan, into its own work to establish a Saltmarsh Sparrow program. Whether that vision will actually be funded and executed before 2023 still remains a question. 鈥淲e have had a lot of discussions,鈥 Elphick says. 鈥淏ut in terms of actually spending money to do anything, we haven鈥檛 witnessed much.鈥

Experts like Shriver and Elphick contend that the extended timeline makes the sparrow鈥檚 situation more precarious, pointing out that the species is  already classified as endangered by  (a nominal label only). 鈥淭here won鈥檛 be any new information by 2023,鈥 says Shriver, who recently co-authored a paper on how nest predators are wiping out . 鈥淲e will have just lost more birds.鈥 He thinks the agency is trying to punt the verdict to an administration that  to expanding the endangered species list.

The four-year window also has other limitations. For one, Elphick says, it doesn鈥檛 give USFWS enough time to weigh outcomes from field testing and pilot projects. 鈥淐utting down trees to see if marshes will migrate inland, raising entire nesting sites鈥攜ou don鈥檛 collect immediate results,鈥 he explains. 鈥淢aybe we can wait another decade for that insight, but Saltmarsh Sparrows could be extinct in a decade and a half.鈥

With so many uncertainties in the pending proposals and plans, the Endangered Species Act, in many scientists鈥 opinion, is still the clearest answer for the bird鈥檚 myriad problems. 鈥淲hile I have confidence in the Atlantic Coast Joint Venture, the Saltmarsh Sparrow needs a broader, concerted conservation effort,鈥 says Walker Golder, 爆料公社鈥檚 Atlantic Flyway program director. He notes that a listing will lead to more wherewithal and attention for restoration; without it, conservationists don't have the power to respond quickly to threats such as sea level rise, predation, and habitat loss.

Like in New York City, for example. In 2015  that one of the few Saltmarsh Sparrow nesting spots in the area had been flattened by a contractor hired by the parks department. The landscape never was replanted, and the breeding population never returned. 鈥淎n endangered-species status would protect these kinds of saltmarshes,鈥 Alison Kocek, an ornithologist who was banding the inhabitants at the site, said at the time. 鈥淚f we lose another one, we don鈥檛 know what will happen.鈥

Weldon agrees that every last stronghold is valuable. 鈥淲e need to work very fast. Even if we don鈥檛 have the time, we鈥檙e going to try and throw everything we can at [the Saltmarsh Sparrow鈥檚 decline],鈥 she says. Elphick and his colleagues are mobilizing, too, in spite of the USFWS setback: They鈥檙e running a species-wide survey in 2021 to learn just how many individuals are left between Florida and Maine.

And if the sparrow is past redemption鈥攚hat then? 鈥淚f we aren鈥檛 successful in saving the species, our efforts will still be important for other tidal marsh birds,鈥 Weldon says. But knowing there's a law that could prevent that outcome just waiting in the wings will continue to frustrate researchers over these next four years.