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Saving the Trumpeter Swan and Hawaiian Goose: Recovery Programs

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Title: Saving the Trumpeter Swan and Hawaiian Goose: Recovery Programs


1
Saving the Trumpeter Swan and Hawaiian Goose
Recovery Programs
  • Stacy Lackey

2
Trumpeter Swan Biology
  • Has a white body, black bill, and a long neck
    that is held straight in flight
  • Eat aquatic plants, insects, snails
  • Usually mate for life
  • Build a big and bulky nest of reeds, rushes,
    roots and grasses lined with down
  • Female lays 5-6 eggs in May and incubates for 32
    days
  • Cygnets stay in nest only until they can
    thermoregulate their temperature
  • They have very little food reserve and must start
    feeding quickly
  • Male and Female molt at different times so one
    will always be able to stay with the cygnets

3
Similar Species
  • Trumpeter swan has a size of 24-25 and is the
    largest swan in the world, weighing up to 35 lbs
  • Similar to the Trumpeter are the Tundra and Mute
    swans
  • The Tundra sometimes has a yellow spot on its
    bill, but is overall smaller at 19.5-22.5
  • Mute has an orange bill and ranges in size from
    21- 24

Tundra Swan
Mute Swan
4
History of Trumpeter Swans
  • Trumpeter Swans were once fairly common
    throughout most of the northern United States and
    Canada
  • Trumpeters nested in Minnesota and Wisconsin
    until the 1880s
  • The Trumpeters' historic breeding range reached
    from western Nebraska to central Michigan. It
    extended as far north and east as James Bay in
    Canada
  • Market hunting and the millinery trade rapidly
    depleted nesting populations during the 19th
    century
  • In the 1930s, there were only 69 Trumpeter Swans
    remaining in the continental U.S.

5
Early Findings
  • By 1900, it was widely believed that the species
    had become extinct
  • Fortunately, a small nonmigratory population
    survived in the remote mountain valleys of
    Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming
  • Two nests were found in Yellowstone National Park
    in 1919 and in 1932, 69 Trumpeters were
    documented in the region
  • We now know that a population of several thousand
    Trumpeters also survived in remote parts of
    Alaska and Canada
  • Passage of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918
    gave protection to trumpeter swans and other
    birds and helped curb illegal killing

6
USFWS Recovery
  • In 1935, the U.S. government established Red Rock
    Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in Montana's
    Centennial Valley to protect the remnant
    Trumpeter population
  • Managed by the USFWS, habitat conditions quickly
    improved when refuge personnel restricted
    livestock grazing and hay cutting in the marshes,
    protected the muskrat population, provided winter
    food, controlled predators, and more recently
    prohibited the use of lead shot and lead fishing
    sinkers because of the danger of lead poisoning
  • With protection at Red Rock Lakes and in
    Yellowstone National Park, the Tri-state
    subpopulation, as it is now known, increased to
    640 birds by the late 1950s
  • In an attempt to expand their range and chances
    of survival, Trumpeters have been transplanted to
    locations with suitable habitat

7
USFWS Recovery, cont.
  • Between the mid-1960s and the mid-1980s, the
    Tri-state subpopulation declined. Productivity
    plunged in the late 1970s, and by 1986 only 392
    birds remained
  • Concern over the decline led to an extensive
    study that demonstrated a close relationship
    between swan survival and the availability of
    winter foods at Red Rock Lakes
  • In 1987 and 1988, marked increases in
    supplemental winter grain coupled with favorable
    weather led to a dramatic increase in the number
    of cygnets produced at areas in and adjacent to
    Red Rock Lakes
  • In 1989, there were 565 birds in the Tristate
    Subpopulation
  • Many other recovery programs were initiated,
    especially those in the midwestern states of
    Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Wisconsin has
    been the most successful of the three

8
Wisconsin Recovery
  • Prior to 1987, it had been 100 years since a
    Trumpeter had reproduced in Wisconsin
  • Beginning in 1987, Wisconsin biologists flew to
    Alaska for nine consecutive years to collect
    Trumpeter eggs, then were hatched in incubators
    at the Milwaukee County Zoo.
  • After they hatched, the young swans were either
    placed in a captive rearing program or decoy
    rearing program until they were released to the
    wild.
  • The original goal was to establish 20 breeding
    pairs by 2000, and in 2004, there were 80 pairs
  • They continue to captive and brood-rear cygnets
    and release them back into the wild, in hopes of
    re-establishing their old numbers.

9
Threats to Restoration
  • They are vulnerable to illegal shooting, since
    they look so similar to other species that can be
    hunted
  • Collisions with power lines
  • Predators Snapping turtles, great horned owls,
    racoons and minks which steal the eggs and kill
    the young
  • Lead poisoning
  • Widespread destruction and degredation of
    wetlands
  • They must compete for food in these small areas
    with other migratory trumpeters and birds that
    live there all year. As a result, some birds may
    be in poor condition by spring. They lack energy
    for migration, egg laying and incubation
  • Other problems include funding, human disturbance
    and recreational development in nesting areas

10
Management
  • For management purposes, Trumpeters are divided
    into populations based on their range
  • About 1,000 Trumpeters occur in western Canada
    and include birds that migrate to the Tri-state
    area. Many of these-swans nest in the Yukon and
    the Northwest Territories. Together with summer
    resident Tri-state swans, these birds comprise
    the Rocky Mountain Population
  • There are nearly 12,000 Trumpeter Swans in
    Alaska. These birds, combined with western
    Canadian flocks and restoration flocks from
    western refuges, comprise the Pacific Coast
    Population
  • A third population, the Interior Population, is
    made up of flocks east of the Rocky Mountains and
    numbers about 500 birds.

11
The Trumpeter Today
  • Once considered for federal 'endangered' status,
    the Trumpeter is not officially listed as
    threatened or endangered
  • In the Midwest, however, it is actually more rare
    than the threatened Bald Eagle
  • It has no official state status in Midwestern
    states, except in Wisconsin, where it is listed
    as an endangered species, and in Michigan, where
    it is a threatened species
  • Today, estimates show about 16,000 trumpeter
    swans reside in North America
  • They are an overall success story, and their
    outlook is bright

12
Why worry?
  • It is one of the rarest waterfowl in North
    America, and the largest
  • Environmental stability
  • Aesthetics
  • To many people, the Trumpeters are the
    embodiment of grace, beauty, and unspoiled
    wildness

13
Hawaiian Goose Biology
  • Also known as Nene or Lava Geese
  • Are extremely friendly and approachable
  • Front and sides of neck appear to have black and
    white stripes
  • Unlike all other geese, the Nene has semi-palmate
    feet
  • One of the smaller geese, range from 21 26
  • Winter breeding season From November to March
  • Nest 2-5 white eggs in a kipuka
  • Nests are down-lined, concealed well under
    bushes, and usually in the same area

14
Biology, cont.
  • Feeds on both native and introduced plants and
    herbs and their seeds, buds, flowers and fruits
  • Habitat includes scrublands, grasslands, golf
    courses, sparsely vegetated slopes, lowland areas
  • Only waterfowl adapted for life on lava flows,
    and are mostly found in the rugged lava fields
  • Only found in Hawaii
  • Does not need fresh water, but will use it when
    available
  • Variety of calls from soft and conversational to
    loud and honking to moo-ing when distressed

15
The Struggle of the Nene
  • An estimated 25,000 Hawaiian geese used to
    inhabit the Hawaiian islands in the time of
    Captain James Cook
  • Europeans arrived in 1778 and their numbers began
    to immediately decline
  • Their approachability became their downfall
  • They were overharvested to feed those out in
    California exploring and to feed people on
    whaling expeditions
  • The mongoose was introduced in 1883
  • Geese made easy targets and the mongoose preyed
    on eggs, chicks, and adults

16
Nene Struggle, cont.
  • Hunting was allowed during the winter breeding
    seasons of the Hawaiian goose, when they are most
    vulnerable
  • This continued until the 1940s
  • Only 20-30 birds remained in 1949
  • In 1950, a few were taken into captivity and by
    1957, many conservation efforts were underway

17
Early Recovery Programs
  • Conservationists began breeding birds in
    captivity
  • Early programs for returning geese to wild proved
    very difficult, and the Nene was listed as an
    endangered species in 1967 under the Federal
    Endangered Species Act
  • There were constant releases in the beginning,
    but when releases were reduced in the 1970s, the
    population declined sharply from 875 geese in
    1977 to 400 in 1980
  • This suggested that releasing captive-bred geese
    had kept the population artificially high
  • Other factors of the declines included low
    productivity due to poor available nutrition
  • Hawaiian Geese are also extremely vulnerable to
    predation by introduced species such as the
    mongoose, rats, dogs, cats, and pigs
  • Much more work was needed to identify and remedy
    the causes for the Nene's decline.

18
Recent Recovery Programs
  • Between 1980 and 1989, various research and
    conservation initiatives were carried out in
    Hawaii.
  • The initiatives eventually culminated in the Nene
    Recovery Initiative, a five year research program
    implemented by the Nene Recovery Action Group,
    with members from the Hawaiian Department of
    Forestry and Wildlife, Hawaiian National Park
    Service, US Fish Wildlife Service, University
    of North Dakota, Smithsonian Institute and
    Wildfowl and Wetland Trust.
  • The Nene Recovery Initiative had the goal of
    re-introducing the Nene and for it to become
    self-sustaining in the wild and had five
    objectives

                                              
19
Nene Recovery Initiative Objectives
  • To continue investigating the causes of the
    Hawaiian Geese low productivity and survival
    rates
  • To investigate the success and cost of various
    management practices in current habitats which
    increase the productivity and survival rates of
    the Hawaiian Goose and to identify additional
    habitats that provide more of the Nene's
    requirements
  • To assess release techniques by collecting data
    from intensive monitoring of released individuals
    and to further research birds in captivity
  • To produce an agreed Management Monitoring Plan
    for the Hawaiian Goose within the first 5-year
    phase and to stipulate the means by which the
    plan could continue to be evaluated and enhanced
    until it becomes self-sustaining without further
    releases.
  • 5. To make the findings available and
    communicate them to all of the public

20
The results?
  • These objectives were implemented through three
    work programs involving 13 studies in total
  • Management Research (5 projects)
  • Aviculture and Release Research (5 projects)
  • Long-term Monitoring (3 studies)
  • This work demonstrated that five from the eight
    sub-populations on Hawaii were not
    self-sustaining due to a variety of causes,
    including
  • Low gosling survival
  • Poor foraging conditions
  • Predation by introduced predators (rats, cats,
    dogs, pigs, mongoose)
  • Road fatalities - about 10 Nenes are run over
    by cars in Hawaii every year

21
The Hawaiian Goose Recovery Plan
  • Every Endangered species has to have a recovery
    plan
  • Published in 1983
  • It outlines the essential elements to accomplish
    a goal of establishing 2,000 geese on Hawaii and
    250 on Maui
  • These elements are to
  • Minimize the mortality rate in the wild
  • Continue release of captive- bred birds
  • To protect and improve habitat where the Nene
    can maintain their populations naturally

22
The Nene today
  • Under some of the first captive breeding efforts
    for an endangered species, the bird's extinction
    has been prevented.
  • Using new information and techniques, this work
    has succeeded in establishing new populations
  • Now, some 1,100 Nene inhabit Hawaii, Maui,
    Molokai and Kauai.
  • Currently, Hawaiian Geese are being raised in
    captivity at the Maui Bird Conservation Center at
    Olinda and the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center
    on the Big Island. Young birds are then released
    into protected habitats by the State
  • The Wildfowl Trust in England also plays a major
    role, distributing Nenes to zoos, aviaries, and
    the wild

23
What should be done and why?
  • Substantial captive populations ensure the future
    survival of the Nene, but further effort is
    needed to conserve wild populations
  • Most importantly, birds need to be able to
    survive in Hawaii without the continued release
    of captive-bred birds
  • Future conservation priorities for the Nene are
    currently being drafted in the USFWS revised Nene
    Recovery Plan
  • Further financial and community support
  • The Nene is the state bird of Hawaii, and its
    residents are very fond of the goose
  • Aesthetic values
  • Its unique characteristics
  • Environmental stability
  • It is the 8th most endangered waterfowl species
    in the world

24
Sources
  • http//www.caprep.com/0904067.htm
  • http//www.fws.gov/pacific/pacificislands/wesa/nen
    e.html
  • http//www.aloha-hawaii.com/hawaii/nene/
  • http//www.wwt.org.uk/threatsp/pastwwt/nene.htm
  • http//www.humboldt.edu/jmb7002/stud/05.html
  • http//www.edf.org/documents/3738_species_Nene.pdf
    search'hawaiian20goose20recovery
  • http//fwie.fw.vt.edu/WWW/esis/lists/e101029.htm
  • http//raysweb.net/specialplaces/pages/swan.html
  • http//www.dnr.state.wi.us/ORG/LAND/er/factsheets/
    birds/SWAN.HTM
  • http//www.trumpeterswansociety.org/
  • http//www.fws.gov/species/species_accounts/bio_sw
    an.html
  • http//www.reallygoodnews.net/trumpeterswansreboun
    dinwisconsin.htm
  • http//www.dnr.wisconsin.gov/org/land/er/swan.htm
  • http//www.umich.edu/esupdate/library/96.09/smith
    .html
  • http//www.wesave.org/swan/program2.htm

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