It is thrilling to see millerbirds on Laysan once more'
September 2011: Critically endangered Nihoa millerbirds are now living on the Hawaiian island of Laysan for the first time in nearly a century, thanks to a historic and collaborative conservation effort.
The bid to save the insect-eating songbird from extinction, which involved releasing 24 of the birds on Laysan Island in Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, was the result of many years of research and detailed planning by biologists and resource managers, led by a partnership between the US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and American Bird Conservancy (ABC).
Millerbirds have been absent from Laysan for nearly 100 years after a closely related subspecies went extinct in the early 20th Century. As part of a decades-long restoration effort, this translocation restores this insect-eating songbird to Laysan's ecosystem.
This is a potential turning point for the birds' recovery‘This project will reduce the chances that catastrophic events such as hurricanes or the introduction of invasive predators will wipe out the species, since there will be independent populations of Millerbirds on two islands, 650 miles apart,' said Loyal Mehrhoff, field supervisor for the Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Office.
‘It is thrilling to see Millerbirds back on Laysan once more, not simply because they have been a missing piece of the island's native ecosystem for so long, but also because this marks a potential turning point in the recovery of the species,' said George Wallace, ABC's Vice President for Oceans and Islands.
‘It is hard to imagine a project of this complexity going any more smoothly. From the capture of birds on Nihoa, the three-day trip to Laysan, and finally the release of birds. We have subsequently resighted all of the radiotagged birds on Laysan and several of the others; all are looking healthy and behaving normally - a very encouraging sign for the future,' he said.
Biologists tracking their progressBiologists from FWS and ABC, avian husbandry experts, and a wildlife veterinarian took special care to ensure the safe transport and arrival of the millerbirds at Laysan after their three-day voyage from Nihoa.
The birds were kept in specially designed cages for six days between their capture on Nihoa and their release on Laysan. Each bird carries a unique combination of coloured leg bands to allow identification in the field, and half the birds were fitted with temporary radio transmitters so that their locations can be determined during their first three weeks in their new home.
Biologists will remain on Laysan for the next year to monitor the birds' movements and behaviors, including, the team hopes, their first nesting attempts.
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