Laysan Duck
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Laysan Duck |
||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male specimen in Cologne Zoo
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
Anas laysanensis Rothschild, 1892 |
The Laysan Duck (Anas laysanensis), also known as the Laysan Teal, is an endangered dabbling duck endemic to the Hawaiian Archipelago. Fossil evidence reveals that Laysan Ducks once lived across the entire Hawaiian Island chain, but today survive only on three small, isolated islands.
The decline of the Laysan Duck began 1100-1600 years ago, with the colonization of the Hawaiian Islands by Polynesians and associated non-native mammalian predators (Reynolds et al. 2004). By 1860, the ducks disappeared from all but Laysan Island (the duck’s namesake), most likely due to predation by introduced rats. Like many isolated island species, the Laysan Duck evolved in an environment lacking mammalian predators, and is ill-suited in defense against non-native ground hunters, such as humans, rats, pigs, and mongoose. For example, Laysan Ducks are more likely to freeze their movement rather than flush or fly when startled— a strategy well suited for cryptic defense against Hawaii’s native flying predators, but ineffective against ground predators. Although the non-migratory Laysan Duck can fly, it does not disperse between major islands (USFWS 2004).
The Laysan Duck found refuge through most of the nineteenth century on rat-free Laysan Island, surviving within the smallest geographic range of any duck species worldwide (415 hectares, or less than four square miles). Laysan Island gained federal protection in 1909, with the establishment of the Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge. However, devastation of the island’s vegetation by introduced rabbits brought the duck to the brink of extinction in 1911, with an all-time low population of 7 to 11 birds.
After many rabbits starved and the remaining ones were eradicated by biologists in 1926, the ducks began to recover, increasing to a population of about 200 in 1960. Congress passed the Endangered Species Preservation Act in 1966, and in 1967 the Laysan Duck was declared an endangered species with federal protection. However, population bottlenecks occurred, such as the severe 1993 El Niño drought and food shortage, which reduced the number of ducks to about 100. Today, breeding and survival of the birds is closely tracked. Since 1998, birds have been fitted with unique leg bands or radio transmitters for monitoring reproductive success and survival, revealing that typically only 30% of ducklings on Laysan Island survive to fledge (USGS 2005). In 2004, the population grew to approximately 576 ducks.
In October of 2004 and 2005, 42 Laysan Ducks were translocated to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge as a collaborative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to establish a second population of ducks in the wild. The creation of a second population on Midway, at the north-western end of the Hawaiian Archipelago, reduces the risk of extinction for the Laysan Duck by random catastrophes such as drought, hurricanes, tsunamis, disease outbreaks (like avian flu), and accidental introductions of non-native plants and animals (USFWS 2005).
The second “insurance” population of Laysan Ducks on Midway has grown quickly, more than doubling in size within the first two years (USGS 2006c). As of January 2007, 100 ducks call Midway’s Sand and Eastern Island home. Researchers monitoring the Midway population have found that the ducks are breeding at an earlier age, and laying more eggs than birds on Laysan. This suggests that the abundant habitat and food available on Midway has stimulated greater reproductive effort in the ducks, which contributes optimism for the long-term persistence of the species (USGS 2006a, 2006b).
The Laysan Duck are members of the mallard clade of dabbling ducks, and are a behaviorally and genetically unique species. Recent evidence suggests they evolved from an east Asian, southern hemispheric ancestor of mallards, not from stray migratory Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) which has been reported in the past (Johnson and Sorenson 1999). The Laysan Duck is teal-sized and dark brown, with a prominent white eye-ring. The bill is short and spatulate, yellowish-green with variable black blotching in males, and dull orange with variable black blotching in females. Some males show faint greenish iridescence on the head or neck and have slightly upturned central tail feathers. The wing has an iridescent purplish-green patch (speculum feathers) in both sexes. Leucistism, or extensive white feathering, is common on the head and neck of older birds. The legs and feet are orange, usually brighter in the male. The annual pre-basic molt is complete, and the ducks loose all their flight feathers and become incapable of flight until new feathers grow in. Wild ducks have been known to live to the age of twelve, and captive birds have lived to the age of eighteen.
The Laysan Duck walks and runs well, with a pelvic girdle adapted to terrestrial foraging. Energetic foraging behavior includes a fly-snapping sprint through brine fly swarms. With necks outstretched, and bills close to the ground, the ducks run along a mudflat and as clouds of flies rise up in front, snap them up by rapidly opening and closing their bills. The ducks also will dabble and filter feed along lake shallows, shore, and in upland vegetation for macroinvertebrates, algae, leaves, and seeds (Reynolds et al. 2004). They are mostly nocturnal in their habits.
Pair formation begins in fall, and nest building begins in spring. The female builds a well-concealed nest on the ground below dense vegetation, especially bunchgrass (Eragrostis variabilis). The nest is a shallow bowl lined with dead grass and down feathers. Egg-laying typically occurs from April to August. Average clutch size on Laysan Island is approximately four eggs. The newly established population on Midway lays twice as many eggs, averaging seven per nest, and a clutch of eight is common. Ducklings are precocial and feed on their own soon after hatching, but are guarded, brooded, and led to foraging sites by the hen for approximately 40 to 60 days.
The persistence of the Laysan Duck into the future is optimistic, though threats to the population remain. Threats include the introduction of non-native species, which may displace native species and adversely affect nesting and foraging opportunities. Devastation to vegetation could increase sedimentation of the lakes and seeps that serve as important foraging habitat. Human visitation to the duck’s habitat may impact nesting and brooding, and landing permits to the refuge are granted only for official or scientific purposes. Debris and contaminants washed ashore by ocean currents could pose a serious threat to the duck. Pesticide containers and oil spills have contaminated Laysan in the past. The island homes of the duck are especially vulnerable to a rise in sea level and extreme weather associated with global warming. Even a slight rise in sea level would destroy a large portion of the duck’s current habitat. The spread of parasites such as the nematode Echinuria uncinata could be extremely pathogenic, as well as the introduction of disease by migratory waterfowl along the Pacific Flyway (such as avian flu, malaria, cholera, botulism and duck plague). Environmental catastrophies such as drought, severe storms, and tsunamis may decimate populations. The increased frequency and severity of storms are an anticipated effect of global warming (USFWS 2004).
A recovery plan for the Laysan Duck has been developed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS 2004). The goal of the recovery program is to conserve and recover the species to the extent that it may be down-listed from endangered to threatened in the near future, and ultimately, that the population be healthy enough to no longer require federal protection under the Endangered Species Act. The emphasis of the recovery plan is the distribution of additional viable populations in the Laysan Duck’s historical range. The creation of multiple populations will decrease the risk that catastrophic events will result in species extinction. The increase of population size will diminish the threats from genetic, demographic and environmental uncertainties. To achieve this goal, biologists plan to establish at least five populations on a combination of predator-free Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and predator-controlled sites on Main Hawaiian Islands. This plan includes the establishment of a successful captive or semi-captive breeding program using wild source eggs for reintroductions to the Main Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, the plan calls for achieving gene flow between the wild source populations through long-term inter-island translocations, and island-specific management for each population to reduce threats and improve quality of habitat. If basic criteria of the recovery plan are met, the Laysan Duck could be down-listed from endangered to threatened by 2019.
[edit] References
- Birds of North America Online. http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/BNA. Feb 8, 2007.
- Johnson, K.P. and Sorenson, M.D. 1999. Phylogeny and biogeography of dabbling ducks (genus: Anas): a comparison of molecular and morphological evidence. Auk 116:792-805.
- Reynolds, M.H. and Kozar, K. 2000. History and current status of the Laysan Duck (Anas laysanensis) in captivity. ‘Elepaio 60(4):59-65.
- Reynolds, M.H. 2004. Habitat use and home range of the Laysan Teal on Laysan Island, Hawaii. Waterbirds 27(2):183-192.
- Reynolds, M.H. Slotterback, J.W. and Walters, J.R. 2004. Diet composition and terrestrial prey selection of the Laysan Teal on Laysan Island. Atoll Research Bulletin 543:181-199.
- Reynolds, M.H. and Work, T.M. 2005. Mortality in the endangered Laysan Teal Anas laysanensis: conservation implications. Wildfowl 55:31-48.
- USFWS (US Fish and Wildlife Service). 2004. Draft Revised Recovery Plan for the Laysan Duck (Anas laysanensis). Portland, OR. 94 p.
- USFWS (US Fish and Wildlife Service). 2005. New arrivals to Midway Atoll NWR provide “insurance” against extinction for nation’s rarest duck. News Release, Oct 28.
- USGS (US Geological Survey). 2005. Translocation of Endangered Laysan Ducks to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge (2004-5). Fact sheet 2005-3128. http://biology.usgs.gov/pierc/Current%20News/Laysan%20Fact%20Sheet%20Final%20LoRes.pdf Feb 9, 2007.
- USGS (US Geological Survey). 2006a. Second generation of the nation’s rarest ducks hatch after translocation. News Release, May 16.
- USGS (US Geological Survey). 2006b. Midway Atoll national Wildlife Refuge welcomes second generation of nation’s rarest ducks. News release, May 23.
- USGS (US Geological Survey). 2006c. Endangered duck population reaches triple digits! News release, Oct 23.