Paradise saved: some of world’s rarest birds rebound
Paradise saved: some of world’s rarest birds
rebound on Pacific islands cleared of invasive
predators
Five
remote Pacific islands are once again safe havens for four
of our world’s rarest bird species following the success
of one of the most ambitious island restoration projects
ever implemented.
Just two years after ambitious efforts
by a team of international conservation organisations to rid
French Polynesia’s Acteon & Gambier island groups of
invasive mammals began, five of six targeted islands are now
confirmed as predator-free—a ground-breaking one thousand
hectares in total. Early signs already indicate that rare
birds found nowhere else in the world (endemic) and other
native plants and animals are recovering as the remote
islands return to their former glory.
The Polynesian Ground-dove Alopecoenas
erythropterus (locally known as Tutururu) is one
of the rarest birds on the planet with fewer than 200
individuals left. Predation and competition by destructive,
non-native (invasive) mammals in French Polynesia have
driven this and other rare, endemic bird species to the
brink of extinction. The species is listed by BirdLife International as
Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List—a category
that signals an extremely high risk of extinction within our
lifetimes.
“The Acteon Gambier island group is home to
the last viable population of Polynesian Ground-dove, a
species once much more widespread in the Pacific”, said
Steve Cranwell, BirdLife International’s Invasive Species
Manager. “This bird’s remaining predator-free habitat
was so small that without this intervention, a cyclone,
prolonged drought, or accidental rat or avian disease
introduction could trigger extinction”.
Introduced mammalian species alone are believed to be responsible for 90% of all bird extinctions since 1500. Early human explorers introduced invasive species such as rats to the remote Acteon & Gambier islands (and thousands more around the world), upsetting the natural balances of the islands and threatening the native plants and wildlife that evolved without defences against land predators.
Operation Restoration
Combining
resources, expertise, equipment, and logistical skills, a
coalition of NGOs, BirdLife International, SOP Manu
(BirdLife Partner, French Polynesia) and Island Conservation—together with the
support of the government of French Polynesia, landowners,
other partners and local volunteers—voyaged over 1,500 km
to six of French Polynesia’s remote islands—Vahanga ,
Tenarunga, Temoe, Kamaka, Makaroa and Manui to complete the
challenging project in 2015.
The project required years
of planning and fundraising (including a partnership with
Rovio’s Angry Birds), involved nine permits, 165
helicopter flight hours, three ships transporting hundreds
of tonnes of equipment and donated bait from key partners Bell
Laboratories and Tomcat, as well as 31 personnel from six
countries (from three continents) who endured extraordinary
weather and sea conditions during 12-day journeys to and
from the islands. The prospect of a brighter future for the
Tutururu and other native island species made the
operations well-worth the effort.
“After extensive
monitoring, a survey in April has confirmed great success on
five of the six islands”, reported Dr David Beaune,
Director SOP Manu. “This is a tremendous achievement that
will provide a permanent solution to the alarming declines
of native species on these islands due to predation and
competition from invasive species”.
Double
benefits: safe habitat and local coconut
production
“The project has more than doubled
the secure habitat for both the Polynesian Ground-dove and
the Tuamotu Sandpiper Prosobonia
parvirostris (locally: Titi), a globally
Endangered landbird”, said Cranwell. “The islands look
vibrant with new native vegetation, and both bird species
have now established and are increasing on the island of
Tenarunga—something that has not been possible for
decades”.
The benefits extend beyond nature alone.
“Without rats, local land managers reported a doubling of
their copra (coconut kernel) production in 2016—a major
source of income for these isolated communities”, said
Pere Joel Aumeran Vicar General for the Catholic Church.
“Safeguarding our islands’ natural value is a foundation
of Polynesian culture and important to the Catholic Church.
This tremendous contribution to the lives of local people
ensures these islands fully recover and remain
predator-free; a legacy the Puamotu people leave for
generations to come”.
“While the success of this
project is vital to securing the future for these globally
threatened birds, it also provides important safe habitat
for other endemic species in a region where there is very
little invasive-predator-free habitat”, explained Richard
Griffiths, Island Conservation’s Project Director. “The
success also serves as an indicator that
invasive-species-driven extinctions on other remote islands
can be avoided if this operation is replicated at
scale”.
Next steps
“We now
need to increase the habitat range of these species by
translocating small populations to islands where they were
previously found—a conservation technique proven highly
effective in Polynesia”, said Dr. Beaune. “Plans are
underway to re-introduce the Tutururu and Titi
to Temoe, and to attract other Endangered seabirds such as
the Polynesian Storm-petrel Nesofregetta
fuliginosa to these predator-free islands”.
To
inform future restoration efforts for complex islands with
challenging terrain, the team is conducting an analysis of
the Kamaka effort, which did not succeed. With invasive
mammals now eradicated from the five islands, the
coalition’s attention is shifting to
biosecurity—preventing re-invasion through monitoring,
education (brochures and signs for tourists), and stringent
inspections of incoming vessels.
“French Polynesia can be immensely proud of completing this project, which, for its scale and complexity, is a first for the region”, Griffiths said. “The government of French Polynesia is well positioned to capitalize on this success and become a leader within the Pacific to rid Oceania’s islands of damaging invasive species”.
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