In 1967, under a precursor of the Endangered Species Act, became the first to receive federal protection as endangered. Some members of that freshman class, like the Bald Eagle, have since soared off the list after stunning recoveries. Others, like the California Condor, have made significant strides but remain fragile and listed.
Somewhere in the middle perches the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler. After bottoming out at 167 breeding pairs in 1974 and again in 1987, the spunky songbird鈥檚 numbers have grown steadily, thanks to rigorous, hands-on management. Its population鈥攁lways naturally small鈥攂lew past the recovery goal of 1,000 pairs back in 2001, and today totals more than 2,300 pairs.
Given that remarkable rebound, it鈥檚 no surprise that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to take the species off the endangered list, and is expected to make that delisting official this summer or fall. But that doesn鈥檛 mean the hard work of protecting the bird is over. The reason the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler remains listed nearly two decades after meeting its recovery goal is that it鈥檚 what biologists call a conservation-reliant species: If we ever stop managing forests to meet the bird鈥檚 particular habitat needs, it will again slide toward endangerment, or worse.
In other words, when we humans hack away at their habitat, introduce invasive pests, or otherwise push conservation-reliant species to the brink, we put ourselves forever on the hook to save them, says Michael Scott, a retired University of Idaho wildlife biologist. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like walking into an antique shop,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou break it, it鈥檚 yours.鈥
While some threatened or endangered wildlife just need a helping hand and then bounce back on their own鈥攂an DDT, and Bald Eagles rebound; eliminate non-native foxes from Aleutian Cackling Goose nesting islands, and the bird's numbers explode鈥攖hose relatively simple cases are the exception, and conservation reliance is the rule. In , Scott and colleagues concluded that 84 percent of species then listed under the Endangered Species Act would require ongoing management, even after official recovery goals are met. 鈥淭he challenge created by the conservation reliance of threatened and endangered species is formidable,鈥 they wrote.
If any species appears ready to meet that challenge, it鈥檚 the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler鈥攏ot due to its own traits or behaviors, but because of the passionate protectors in its corner. These university scientists, government wildlife experts, and nonprofit conservationists have long recognized that delisting, while a welcome sign of recovery, could put the species on shaky existential terrain. To build the bird a secure future, they鈥檝e teamed up and put in place a plan to keep its numbers on the rebound.
鈥淭his is a keystone management species that鈥檚 entirely conservation-reliant, and we have built a partnership that we believe will sustain this species and all the other species that rely on its management,鈥 says Carol Bocetti, a biologist at California University of Pennsylvania who has been part of the warbler recovery effort for more than three decades. 鈥淭hat has certainly never been done before.鈥
A Precarious Perch
One reason the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler landed on the endangered list is nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds. The species鈥攚hich moved into Kirtland鈥檚 breeding territory in the early 20th century after logging and land-clearing created new habitat鈥攍ays eggs in warbler nests and lets the endangered birds do the energy-draining work of raising cowbird chicks, which often outcompete their smaller nestmates and diminish overall reproductive success. To give the warblers a fighting chance, the FWS began trapping and euthanizing cowbirds in 1972. Emerging research suggests that the cowbird control may no longer be needed鈥攑erhaps because their own habitat has been dwindling in Michigan鈥攂ut for now that work continues.
The more fundamental factor in the warbler鈥檚 decline, though, was habitat loss. The species nests on the ground in young jack pine forests, with almost the entire breeding-season population in northern Michigan and the rest in Wisconsin and Ontario. Historically, forest fires regularly scorched those sandy pine barrens, wiping out old trees and regenerating the large tracts of shrubby woods the birds need for breeding. But decades of fire suppression to protect property in the area led to a drastic decrease in the acreage burned each year, making proper habitat harder to find.
Saving the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler has involved regenerating its required habitat鈥攋ack pine stands about 5 to 20 years old鈥攂y clear-cutting and replanting portions of the forest on a rotating basis across more than 210,000 acres of public land. Kirtland鈥檚 Warblers haven't been the lone beneficiaries of that work. The birds are emblematic members of an ecosystem built of blueberry bushes and fragrant sweet fern: large mammals like badgers and black bears, and avian species such as American Kestrel, Clay-colored Sparrow, and Upland Sandpiper. 鈥淚f it weren鈥檛 for the management of this species, that ecosystem wouldn鈥檛 exist,鈥 Bocetti says.
Managers know they鈥檒l need to maintain existing warbler habitat for the foreseeable future and add new tracts when opportunities arise. That鈥檚 why, in 2011, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, the U.S. Forest Service, and the FWS signed committing the agencies to continue working together to conserve the species. And in 2015 they released a formal detailing each agency鈥檚 ongoing responsibilities.
Of course, that work costs money. As an endangered species, the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler has been a priority for conservation funding. The mix of state and federal dollars devoted to the bird is complex and varies from year to year, and it鈥檚 difficult to say exactly how delisting will change that picture. But even with the benefit of Endangered Species Act programs it has sometimes been a challenge to acquire the necessary funding, and that struggle will only intensify after delisting.
Securing the Future
To keep the species from losing ground will take about $376,000 per year in ongoing management, monitoring, and outreach costs, along with $2 million for research and other short-term projects, according to a business plan put together by the , which was formed in 2016 as the long-term replacement for a recovery team established through the Endangered Species Act. The conservation team and others aim to raise roughly $7.5 million in endowment funds whose annual interest can cover those costs.
The American Bird Conservancy has set up a for the bird, as has the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler Alliance, which formed in 2013 under the umbrella of northern Michigan conservation group Huron Pines to raise money, educate the public, and otherwise support the bird鈥檚 ongoing protection. The Alliance is only now setting off on its own; it became incorporated as an independent nonprofit organization this spring, just , and is seeking funding to hire an executive director.
Bill Rapai, a former journalist who wrote and now chairs the Alliance board of directors, says he鈥檚 determined to build the funding stream and public support the warbler will need to thrive. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to fail the species,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to fail the people who have dedicated their careers鈥攖here are a lot of people who have come before me who put their heart and soul into this bird. Believe me, I am aware of that.鈥
So far, fundraising efforts have netted only a sliver of their goal. But they鈥檙e just getting underway, and Nat Miller, director of conservation for and a member of the conservation team鈥檚 long-term funding committee, says he鈥檚 confident that 爆料公社 and others will raise what鈥檚 needed. Besides, Miller says, having built strong relationships over decades of shared endeavor, the agencies and organizations involved will do what it takes to save the species should any lean years lie ahead. 鈥淭he Endangered Species Act, besides delivering dollars, has also stimulated the partnerships,鈥 he says. 鈥淐ollaboration is always hard work, but it builds a deep bench of support.鈥
For its part, 爆料公社 Great Lakes is conducting outreach through its to build public awareness of the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler and why it needs ongoing help. , meanwhile, works with the U.S. Forest Service to provide guided that can deepen participants鈥 commitment to conserving the species.
Through its International Alliances Program, 爆料公社 also plays a lead role鈥攁long with the Bahamas National Trust and others on the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler Conservation Team鈥攊n conserving the bird鈥檚 winter habitat in the Caribbean. 鈥淲e want to make sure the wintering grounds are as protected as the breeding grounds,鈥 Miller says.
Climate change makes protecting that winter habitat crucial. It ratchets up the risk that hurricanes, sea-level rise, or other hazards could devastate the species. The Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler may be in good shape today, but its population is small and clusters each non-breeding season on a handful of small islands in the Bahamas. There the tiny birds are vulnerable. But whatever threats they face, they do not face alone.