Envirowatchers

[ Envirowatchers ] [ Main Menu ]


  


18958


Date: December 29, 2023 at 15:55:16
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: ‘Grief is a rational response’: 21 US species declared extinct this yr

URL: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/dec/29/us-animals-birds-extinct-this-year


We’re losing something of ourselves when these birds disappear

Noah Gomes, native bird expert

‘Grief is a rational response’: the 21 US species declared extinct this year
Hawaii hardest hit by loss of eight birds, with an Ohio catfish, a Pacific fruit
bat and eight freshwater mussels also disappearing

The Kauaʻi ʻōʻō, a small black and yellow bird with glossy feathers and a
haunting song, was the last surviving member of the Hawaiian honeyeaters.
This year, it was officially declared extinct.

The ōʻō was one of 21 species that the US Fish and Wildlife Service removed
from the endangered species list in 2023 because they had vanished from
the wild. Gone is the little Mariana fruit bat – also known as the Guam flying
fox – and the bridled white-eye, which was once one of the most common
birds on that island. So too, are the Scioto madtom, a diminutive, whiskered
catfish that lived in Ohio, and the Bachman’s warbler, which summered in the
US south and wintered in Cuba. Eight freshwater mussels in the south-east
are officially extinct, as are eight Hawaiian birds.

manatee underwater
Hope for Florida’s dwindling manatees as review could restore protections
Read more
The delisting, which was finalised in November after two years of study and
consideration, came as no surprise to biologists and conservationists. Many
of these species had not been seen in decades. But the announcement was
a sobering reminder that the climate crisis and habitat destruction are
accelerating an extinction crisis that threatens 2 million species globally.

For the scientists and environmentalists who have been working to protect
these species, the delisting has been a moment to mourn – and to galvanise.
“It’s a horrible tragedy,” said the ecologist and author Carl Safina. “And I think
it is a breach of our moral guardrails.”

An ‘i’iwi, a threatened species of Hawaiian honeycreeper, on the island of
Kauaʻi. The species is now susceptible to avian malaria.
An ‘i’iwi, a threatened species of Hawaiian honeycreeper, on the island of
Kauaʻi. The species is now susceptible to avian malaria. Photograph: Jim
Denny/AP
Hawaii
In the US, the loss of biodiversity is felt more acutely in Hawaii than anywhere
else. Eight of the 21 delisted species were Hawaiian forest birds. Four other
species are at imminent risk of extinction, largely due to an epidemic of avian
malaria, a disease transmitted by invasive mosquitoes, and habitat loss.


And the climate crisis, which has shifted local weather patterns and
reshaped sensitive island ecosystems, is further complicating matters, said
Rachel Kingsley. As an outreach associate with the Maui Forest Bird
Recovery Project, a conservation organization, she has been involved in
efforts to recover the critically endangered cousins of the birds declared
extinct this year.

“Many of the same threats faced by the birds that were recently declared
extinct are the same ones threatening our forest birds now,” Kingsley said.
“Within the last handful of years, the threat of malaria has really increased
dramatically.”

The Kauaʻi ʻōʻō, a small black and yellow bird, was among those officially
declared extinct in 2023.
The Kauaʻi ʻōʻō, a small black and yellow bird, was among those officially
declared extinct in 2023. Photograph: WikiMediaCommons
To combat the disease, which is spread by mosquitoes that were probably
introduced via European ships in the early 19th century, a coalition of federal
and state officials and non-profit groups are releasing mosquitoes with a
special strain of bacterium that can suppress the insects’ ability to
reproduce. But in the meantime, warmer temperatures have expanded the
mosquitoes’ range, pushing them into higher elevations, leaving forest birds
with little refuge. “Unfortunately, it seems like the fast forward button kind of
got pushed down on us,” said Kingsley.

Global heating has also fueled extreme weather, exacerbated drought and
wildfire risk, further imperilling the islands’ forest birds. This year, the
devastating blaze that destroyed the town of Lahaina nearly engulfed a
conservation centre for some of the world’s rarest birds, including the ‘akikiki,
a species of honeycreeper that is considered the most endangered bird in
the US. The fire came within about 150 feet of the property before
conservationists were able to fight it off.

We’re losing something of ourselves when these birds disappear
Noah Gomes, native bird expert
For the scientists fighting to save them from extinction, bearing witness to
their decline can be a profound and devastating responsibility. In his nearly
50-year career, Jim Jacobi, a biologist with the Pacific Island Ecosystems
Research Center, has been one of the last people on earth to ever see at
least four birds that are now considered extinct. In 1984, he was one of the
last people to ever hear the song of the Kauaʻi ʻōʻō.


“I still get goosebumps – the hair in the back of my neck stands up when I
think about it,” he said. He and two other researchers had hiked out to a
remote forest in Kauai when they heard it. “That Oo’oo – oo-auh sound.

“It was just amazing – very flute-like,” he recalled. He immediately turned on
his recorder to capture the song.

The bird flitted away – but a few moments later, when they hiked down to an
old nest tree, they heard it again. Jacobi wanted to make sure his recorder
was ready and working, so he rewound the tape and played it back.

Suddenly, ʻōʻō came soaring toward the researchers, singing its mellifluous
song. It came so close that they didn’t need binoculars to see its glossy black
feathers, and the peek of yellow at its tail.

“I thought, wow, this is fantastic!” Sincock said. Almost immediately, he
deflated. The ʻōʻō had been drawn to a recording of its own voice – thinking it
was another bird. “It came because it thought it heard something that it
probably hadn’t heard for a long time – another of its kind,” he said. This bird
was perhaps the last of his species, singing for a mate that would never
come.


Kauaʻi ʻōʻō was one of many ʻōʻō birds that lived throughout many parts of the
Hawaiian islands. Its delisting marks the only complete loss of an entire avian
family in modern times.

Its cousins on the Big Island, Oahu and Molokaʻi had even grander tail
feathers that were once used to construct the cloaks and capes worn by
Hawaiian royalty, explained Jonee Peters, executive director of the
Conservation Council for Hawaii. Hunters would collect the feathers without
harming the birds, during the moulting season – using skills and knowledge
that have all but faded away.

“What makes us Hawai’ian is the collective experiences of ourselves and of
our ancestors,” said Noah Gomes, a native bird expert and historian based in
Hilo, Hawaii. “We’re losing something of ourselves when these birds
disappear.”

Mourning lost species
The federal government first proposed removing nearly two dozen species
from the endangered species list in 2021. Until then, only 11 other species
had ever been delisted because of extinction in the 50 years since the ESA
took effect.

“The news just made me so sad,” said Tierra Curry, a conservation biologist
with the Center for Biological Diversity. “I had all these feelings back then and
I needed to process them.”

So she organised a wake. She and a colleague wrote eulogies for each
species, noting that the little Mariana fruit bat, “wasn’t all that little, actually”,
and marvelling at how the inch-long San Marcos gambusia made a home for
itself in a half-mile, slow-flowing section of the upper San Marcos River in
Texas. During a virtual ceremony, as volunteers read out the tributes, she lit
prayer candles embossed with each species’ image. “I thought about how I
would grieve for a friend – and of course we would have a ceremony, and talk
about them,” she said.

She also thought about how she could honour their memory. “It’s important
to make space for grief, because grief is a rational response to what is
happening to the planet,” Curry said. “But it’s also important to not dwell
there. As I lit the candles for each extinct species, I also focused on what I
could do to save the ones that are still here.”

The now-extinct Pig Toe mussel only received environmental protection
seven years after it was last seen in the wild.
The now-extinct flat pigtoe mussel only received environmental protection
seven years after it was last seen in the wild. Photograph: Alamy
When the Fish and Wildlife Services finalised its decision to declare the
species extinct this year, Curry resolved to advocate for more conservation
funding and a strengthening of the Endangered Species Act. This year has
put renewed scrutiny on the landmark legislation and whether it is enough to
fight the staggering rate of biodiversity loss.

In many cases, Curry said, the species that were declared extinct this year
had been listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) too late. The flat
pigtoe mussel, for example, only gained ESA protections in 1987 – seven
years after it was last seen in the wild, and more than a decade after
construction began on a dam that experts agreed would imperil its
population.

In other cases, species are protected – but scientists lack the funding and
resources needed to recover them. A 2016 study by CBD found that
Congress only provides about 3.5% of the funding that the Fish and Wildlife
Service’s own scientists estimate is needed to recover species.

The Endangered Species Act has helped bring some species – such as the
bald eagle – back from the brink. “But in some ways, the ESA is like having an
emergency room and intensive care unit, without providing regular
immunizations and check-ups,” said Safina.

The scope of the extinction crisis, he said, “is
completely overwhelming to the capacity of the human mind to actually know
and understand”.


Amid a worsening climate crisis and rapid deforestation and habitat loss,
nearly all of nature needs urgent action and protection. It is nearly impossible
for us to fathom how quickly, how many species are disappearing, Safina
added. “And so the endeavour of stopping this crisis becomes more of a
religious kind of experience than a scientific one, in a sense, more moral than
practical.”


Responses:
[18959]


18959


Date: December 29, 2023 at 22:49:02
From: ao, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: ‘Grief is a rational response’: 21 US species declared extinct...


Grief? Sheesh, that’s a good reason to turn every climate change denier
into Soylent.


Responses:
None


[ Envirowatchers ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele