On a late-winter night in southern Louisiana, a small group of scientists and college students drags paint cans full of BBs and bolts through a marsh. With spotlights and fishing nets at the ready, they take high steps over tangles of grass, hoping the clattering will flush out their quarry鈥攁 red-eyed, sparrow-size bird that few people have ever seen.
Three hours into the march, as expectations fade and leg muscles start to quake, someone yells the two words the surveyors have been waiting to hear.
鈥淏lack Rail!鈥
Jonathon Lueck, a bearded graduate student in a raccoon-skin cap, drops the dragline of cans and races after the bird. It flies a few yards, then falls back to the safety of the grass, where it lives in an underworld of tunnels and hideouts. Lueck swings his net and misses. He tries cupping his hands over the wily rail, but it slips from his fingers. Erik Johnson, 爆料公社 Louisiana鈥檚 director of bird conservation, catches up and drops his net in the nick of time.
鈥淲ooo,鈥 Johnson yells. He scoops up the rail and holds it gently for all to see its dappled, gunmetal-gray feathers. 鈥淭he bird that doesn鈥檛 exist.鈥
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or most ornithologists and birders, Black Rails are near-mythical creatures. They鈥檙e shy around people, tend to come out only at night, and rarely fly. They also live deep within remote wetlands in the Midwest, Southwest, and on every U.S. coast, making it tough for researchers to gain more than a basic grasp on the species. But that鈥檚 starting to change along the Gulf, where Johnson and are collecting one of the continent鈥檚 richest pools of data on the elusive bird
The information comes at an especially critical time. Black Rails once ranged across salt and freshwater marshes along the Gulf and the Atlantic鈥攂ut these landscapes have been disappearing under growing cities and farms. In Louisiana, sea level rise, erosion, and sinking tracts for the bird. About are eaten away each year, robbing the rail of necessary habitat.
鈥淏lack Rails are in desperate straits,鈥 says Bryan Watts, an avian biologist at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e being completely squeezed out.鈥
Late last year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The Atlantic seaboard alone has seen a 95 percent dip in numbers, Watts, who provided , says. Only about 1,000 breeding pairs are believed to live on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts.
The listing, which is under review until October, could come with special protections and federal resources to preserve habitat. But the bird鈥檚 breeding, nesting, and migration habits are largely a mystery, making effective stewardship difficult.
鈥淭heir status in Louisiana was completely unknown before we started,鈥 Johnson says of , which began in 2017. Back then, only 13 Black Rails had been confirmed in the state. In just a few months of winter patrols, the team has more than quadrupled that number. They recently discovered a stronghold for the species in the , along with smaller populations in the Chenier Plain, which stretches about 100 miles from Vermillion Parish to the border with Texas.
The crew logged its 70th record with the rail that Johnson caught during last month鈥檚 outing. A young female, it weighed 1.3 ounces鈥攁bout as much as a AA battery. The encounter, from net to release, lasted just a few minutes. But in the effort to save Black Rails and Louisiana鈥檚 marshes, every one of those minutes is priceless.
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rained, practiced, and armed with eyelash glue, the 爆料公社 Louisiana team is well-equipped for their mission. The Black Rails prove a worthy opponent: They鈥檙e experts in stealth, says Auriel Fournier, a marsh bird expert at Mississippi State University, who鈥檚 joined in on previous surveys. 鈥淭hey have camouflage; they don鈥檛 vocalize very frequently; they stay close to the ground; and they鈥檙e so incredibly small,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey survive by not being seen.鈥
In fact, the simplest way to find the species is to listen for its . 鈥淵ou鈥檙e lucky if you hear one,鈥 says Justin Lehman, 爆料公社 Louisiana鈥檚 marsh bird technician. 鈥淥nly a few thousand people in the world have actually seen it.鈥
As the study鈥檚 lead scientist, Lehman is in an enviable position, with 26 Black Rail sightings over the past two field seasons. But he鈥檚 had to pull a few tricks to make that happen. First off, he鈥檚 learned that noisy cans are the most effective way to rile rails up. So, every Friday and Saturday between November and February, he and his team incite a small riot in the wetlands. They bring out their draglines at night when the birds are active, and stick to winter months to avoid disturbing nests.
With all the clattering, the rails usually fly straight into the air, then drift out awkwardly a few yards to land back on the ground. That鈥檚 when the team hits them with spotlights, stunning them for a moment. 鈥淚t gives us a second to try to catch up,鈥 Lueck, the eager young volunteer, says.
Once in hand, the rails are banded with tiny, numbered bracelets, weighed, and measured. Feather samples are drawn and send to labs in North Carolina and Oklahoma for analysis, both for DNA and hints of the birds鈥 breeding sites. In December, the team also began attaching mini radio transmitters (hence the eyelash glue) to help reveal migration movements and nesting locations. Weighing about the same as a paper clip, the device is designed to fall off the rails鈥 backs after a few weeks. The group will then try to recapture the bird to swap in a fresh tracker.
The surveys are labor-intensive, but they鈥檝e already paid off. For instance, 爆料公社 Louisiana scientists now know that unbroken stretches of gulf cordgrass yield the best Black Rail numbers. 鈥淲hen you get 50 percent of the grass, rail occupancy goes way up,鈥 Lehman says. This marsh type, with its higher, drier soils, is only found in a narrow strip near the Gulf shore, making it vulnerable to climate change and various eroding factors. 鈥淎s we lose land in Louisiana, it鈥檚 the first to go,鈥 Lehman says.
That鈥檚 where the pending USFWS decision could help. A spot on the endangered species list wouldn鈥檛 directly reverse land loss, but it might ease some of the Black Rail鈥檚 other woes. The proposed by the agency suggest restricted grazing, haying, and agricultural mowing in Black Rail habitats. They also highlight prescribed marsh burns, a common practice on the Gulf Coast used by federal and state land managers today to kill invasive plants and reduce large brush fires. Recent research hints that carefully managed blazes may actually make marshes stronger by that鈥檚 more resistant to erosion. What the USFWS wants, however, is to avoid burns in the middle of Black Rail nesting season, or in areas with high-concentration populations.
Johnson of 爆料公社 Louisiana says that grazing and fires are potentially beneficial to rails, depending on how they鈥檙e managed. Both practices, he thinks, can keep woody and invasive plants from crowding out the open, grassy habitat rails prefer.
Another looming issue is the liquid natural gas boom in southwest Louisiana. One export terminal recently opened in Cameron Parish, a hotbed for rail activity, and eight more large facilities are proposed nearby.
Johnson says the survey鈥檚 most fruitful spot鈥攁 privately owned marshland in Cameron, where more than half the Black Rails have been tagged鈥 to have a 400-acre gas terminal alongside it by 2024. The operation would bring noise, light, traffic, and pollution, he says, but that鈥檚 not the only problem: As seawater drags away stabalizing soils, the shoreline of the marsh has retreated by about 70 feet over the past 20 years, a faster pace than much of the rest of the state.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the holy grail site for Black Rails,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 about to be inundated.鈥
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n the end, the 爆料公社 Louisiana study isn鈥檛 just about the survival of Black Rails. The team caught five of seven U.S. rail species in that January weekend, including Soras, Virginias, Yellows, and a hen-size Clapper. They鈥檝e logged data on a total of 16 Soras, 44 Virginias, 55 Yellows, 15 Clappers, and 15 Black Rails, and have found that all five species thrive in the elevated cordgrass marshes. If Black Rails get bumped to protected status, their rail cousins will benefit by default, Lehman says.
As he plans his final surveys of the year, Lehman is grateful for the hundreds of field hours his scouts鈥攎ostly students from local colleges and high schools鈥攈ave put in. Lueck, a wildlife management student at McNeese State University, who grew up hunting and frogging, is among the most dedicated: His weekends are now reserved for the forays on the coast. 鈥淢uch of volunteer research is sitting around and watching,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut with this, you鈥檙e running down birds in the dark out in the marsh. It鈥檚 as fun as you can get.鈥
Fournier, who鈥檚 studied Black Rails for nearly a decade, hadn鈥檛 seen a live one until she went out with Lehman and his crew. 鈥淚t sounds silly, but I stood there and cried,鈥 she says. As the surveys continue, she expects them to produce new insights on how rails feed, migrate, and breed鈥攁ll of which will be critical if the bird is granted threatened species status. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to protect them, this information is really fundamental for any next steps,鈥 Fournier says.
In the meantime, scientists will keep pulling graveyard shifts and coaxing out answers, one ghostly marsh bird at a time.
The reporting for this story was done in collaboration with .