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Missing:
600 Great Blue Herons. Reward offered.
By
Meg Olson
It was once
thought to be the largest heronry on the west coast, and now
it's empty. This June the few herons that had chosen
to nest in the Point Roberts heron colony this year abandoned
their nests and their young. Biologist Ann Eissinger, who has
been monitoring the colony for years says she doesn't know
why.
Right
off the top we were missing 600 birds, Eissinger
said. The herons were slow to return and out of the
expected 400 or more nesting pairs expected, only 100 returned.
In
fall, herons move out of their colonies and disperse around
what Eissinger calls the Salish Sea, the inland marine waters
of Washington and British Columbia wintering in fields, wetlands,
along stream banks and the marine shoreline. In spring they
congregate in staging areas near the colony they use year after
year for nesting. Before the golf course the heron staged
right there in those ponds and along the bluff, Eissinger
said. During construction of the Point Roberts Golf and Country
Club Eissinger worked with the developer to try to minimize
impact on the colony, which is adjacent to the golf course.
However, while some birds have continued staging along the
bluff most have been congregating in the salt flats between
the two causeways in Tsawwassen and on tribal lands there.
This
year Eissinger said staging was scattered in March. There
was no coalescing and it wasn't until sometime in
April they settled into nesting, she said. While
the 100 nesting pairs that returned to Point Roberts did
incubate eggs and hatch young, Eissinger said they
were jumpy, skittish, not like they usually are.
The
first week in June local colony monitor Renee Coe reported
to Eissinger the usually chattering colony seemed very quiet. “I
got up there and the herons were gone, Eissinger
said. It
was completely silent, extremely eerie.
Regarding
the reasons for the abandonment, all Eissinger has
are theories. This is a highly unusual situation and
hard to explain, she said. Other than
a catastrophe what affects colonies of birds is usually
a combination of effects. Food
shortage, human disturbance or bald eagle predation
may all have contributed. The eagles were in
there consistently, Eissinger
said, referring specifically to the juvenile bald eagles
that grab eggs and fledglings from the nest.
In an
apparent contradiction, the new Tsawwassen colony
has sprung up around an active eagle nest, with a heron
even building a nest further down on the same tree. The more successful
colonies seem to have established themselves in a
bald eagle territory, Eissinger said, explaining that an adult nesting
pair might occasionally steal eggs and baby herons,
but would also chase away marauding juvenile eagles from their territory.
In Point Roberts an eagle nest next to the golf course's
ninth hole probably played that role but is not active
this year, Eissinger said. The success of
that colony seems to perhaps depend on the success
of that nest, she said.
While Eissinger
doesn't
know why the herons abandoned Point Roberts, she
has an idea where some of them went. On the bluff
behind the condominiums at the foot of the ferry
causeway a new colony has formed this year. We
can assume some of the birds likely went to the
Tsawwassen bluff.
There is
a chance the herons will come back to the Point Roberts colony,
just as they did in Birch Bay where 700 adults abandoned
their nests in June 1999 but returned to the
colony the following year. That colony continues to be
successful. The Point Roberts colony itself had
a history of moving around before settling at
its current location in 1973. The Trillium Corporation
and state department of fish and wildlife subsequently
purchased the colony and adjacent lands to protect
it from human disturbance.
Eissinger
said the loss of the Point Roberts colony could diminish the
number of herons throughout the Salish Sea and, while she hoped
the herons would be back, she said it underscored the importance
of long term monitoring of heron colonies. The state does
periodic monitoring but we need long-term,
consistent monitoring, she
said. This may be part of a natural process
a colony grows, stabilizes, then fragments.
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