James Janega, Chicago Tribune
January 15, 2008
The bird die-off was obvious as soon as Gary Rentrop
and his English setter turned onto the
"It was almost like a war zone of birds," said Rentrop,
a
Rentrop counted 80 carcasses on a remote mile of
beach near
The mounting toll on migrating birds has stoked fears among
researchers and ecologists that blame for the deaths lies with invasive
populations of zebra mussels and round gobies -- which arrived in ballast tanks
in the 1980s and 1990s -- spreading over the
Zebra mussels and their deep-water kin, quagga
mussels, filter naturally occurring botulism and other toxins from the water.
Gobies eat the mussels, and birds, in turn, eat the gobies.
Scientists theorize this new food chain is concentrating botulism and other
toxins and passing them up to predators. The theory is the subject of a handful
of scientific papers and upcoming research proposals.
Whatever the mechanism of transmitting the botulism, scientists in 1999 counted
311 birds in
In spreadsheets, scientists have noted the fatal effects of the annual
outbreaks on more than 50 species of birds throughout the
The deaths of many hundreds of loons have focused new urgency on the now-annual
die-offs that occur from summer to fall. Loons live in small numbers, are slow
to reproduce and are a symbol of northern wilderness.
The die-off that ended in November claimed an estimated 3,500 to 8,500 birds --
including the loons and plovers -- over hundreds of miles of beach in seven
northern
The die-off also sparked preparations for a sprawling and macabre bird count in
2008 that will involve scores of volunteers combing hundreds of miles of
"We wish we weren't dealing with this," said Mark Breederland,
who as extension educator for the Michigan Sea Grant research program is
organizing the upcoming response. "We've got enough challenges on
The heightened threat to
Then came autumn.
"We were getting so many loons," said Thomas Cooley, a Michigan
Department of Natural Resources biologist who performed necropsies on the
birds. It takes 10 or 12 of the big birds to cover a laboratory table, he
explained. "When you have two or three tables covered with those, it's
pretty sobering to look at that."
Among the birds found dead was one of the most-studied loons in
Each year since 1993, he had been observed at an
Researchers knew C-3 had spent much of his life with the same female loon on a
secluded pond in a corner of the refuge and that for unexplained reasons, he had recently left her for another loon on a
neighboring pond in the refuge.
They knew that he stayed behind at the new pond a few weeks this year to
supervise one late blooming chick as other loons began their fall migration,
which may have timed his migration perfectly to a botulism plume and indirectly
spelled his doom. To their knowledge, C-3 had raised more than 15 chicks over
the years, and only once let a chick drown -- when its leg got caught on a
submerged log. For a loon, made him a good father,
researchers said.
The loon's body was found Nov. 1 by an old friend, of sorts, on a deserted,
sandy crescent of
Biologist and
"I remember specifically walking up to this bird," Kaplan said.
"There are thousands of thousands of birds that died on that lake, and
here's a bird that had a known history. I had a relationship with this bird.
It's an element of familiarity that you didn't want to find."
Adult loons return to their northern nesting grounds by early spring about 93
percent of the time, McCormick said. This year, researchers will be watching
for them anxiously. A decline in adult population would almost certainly spell
a decline among loons.
"We expect to see all our birds," McCormick said. "But based on
finding the C-3 male, there's a lot more trepidation of what we'll find this
spring."