within the ecosystem eradicating them is complicated. Wait for improved mouse bait?
KQED News Fix 5/16/11. "The Farallon Islands have been crawling with house mice for
years. They may have stowed away on boats and ridden out to the
islands as early as the 1800s. Mice can be annoying or -- if
they're your pets -- cute, but in the Farallones they’re causing
problems on a life-and-death scale. “People on the island talk about how the ground moves because
there's so many mice,” explains Brad Keitt, the Director of
Conservation for Island Conservation.
The non-native mice attract burrowing
owls, which would normally stop by the island for a meal,
then head out. But the mouse bounty has caused them to extend
their stay. And when the mouse population falls in the winter,
the owls switch to eating birds, including the ashy
storm-petrel, an endangered species that only nests on
islands off the coast of California. Santa Cruz-based Island
Conservation, whose mission is to stop extinctions by
eradicating invasive species on islands, is working with the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and PRBO Conservation
Science to rid the South Farallon Islands of the rodents.
But as anyone who’s had a mouse infestation knows, that’s easier
said than done.
'You have to get rid of every single mouse,' says U.S Fish
and Wildlife Service spokesman Doug Cordell. 'Any method you
choose has to be 100% effective, but it can't cause
significant harm to other species.' The Fish and Wildlife
Service is considering its options. One of those is to drop
rodenticide-pellets on the islands. That idea has drawn vocal
criticism from San Rafael wildlife organization WildCare. 'The pellets are only for mice, but anything else could eat
these things,' says Maggie Sergio, the director of wildlife
advocacy at Wildcare. Birds that eat seafood probably wouldn’t
be attracted to them, but birds like gulls might. Sergio’s
concerned about secondary poisoning, too: Hawks and owls could
be affected by eating the poisoned mice. Sergio acknowledges
it’s a difficult decision: Is it worth possibly poisoning other
animals to save the ashy storm-petrel? What about the burrowing
owls? (Burrowing owls, though not native to the Farallones,
naturally live in California, and they’re a 'species
of special concern [pdf]' due to habitat loss on the
mainland.)
Last week the Fish and Wildlife Service held a public meeting at
Fort Mason to gather feedback on the project. And they're
accepting public
comment until June 10 (the deadline's been extended). At
this stage, nothing's set in stone, says Cordell. 'It's a tough
call. We know we have a real problem out there. The question is
what to do about it.' He emphasizes that using a rodenticide is
just one of the options he expects will be put forward in an
environmental impact statement due this fall, but that he's open
to hearing other suggestions. Doing nothing may be an option as
well, he says.
The effects of invasive species on any ecosystem range from
annoying to catastrophic. On islands, it’s always a bit
more interesting. Islands usually have fewer species living on
them, and those species are often not well-adapted to mainland
dangers. The dodo comes to mind. (This fat flightless pigeon
living on an island without humans was no match for hungry
sailors.) As humans have become more mobile, we’ve also gotten
better at distributing plants and animals to previously isolated
places all over the world, to the detriment of native species.
And that’s one thing everyone agrees on: This is a man-made
problem. What they haven’t figured out yet is how--or if--to fix
it'."
Additional
References
San Francisco Chronicle article, 5/13/11, and Fort Mason meeting, some island photos, video on image 12.
Case histories of island mouse/rat eradication. Bay Nature 5/26/11.
Potential mouse specific toxic bait, government cost-sharing grant, 8/27/10 status unknown.
Farallon Islands, California Galapagos, 10:55 minute video.
Posted by Kathy Meeh
Friday, June 17, 2011
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6 comments:
What does this have to do with Pacifica?
Anon (614) what does your comment have to do with anything?
However, the Farallones are our neighborhood islands. Mice/rats are a problem on our hills too, but technically Pacifica is not isolated. There is no rodentcide without harmful affects to other species and the ecology, but the government has offered a shared cost grant to advance research. Should that occur that would be a major benefit to rodent eradication.
The question of what do about the Farallon mice problem at this time is pending. Public comments ended 6/10/11, no further report.
There is a wealth of information about Farallon island history, evidence of separate ecological changes, and of course the mouse problem. Others may be interested in this issue. I am, its my article and I'm looking forward to better, intelligent, shared commentary.
BB gun, 22, for big mice, 20ga. What's the problem? Put me up in one of those cool houses out there and I'll hunt em down. I just want to be able to skin em and take the jerky home.
Or, then again, be whooos' and use D-Con.
How bout putting a couple hundred feral cats out on the island??
DUH!!
Just buy some Mouse-be-gone
Hey,Captain Bertini knows where to get some feral cats.....LOL
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