Current:Home > MyA warming island’s mice are breeding out of control and eating seabirds. An extermination is planned -MoneyMatrix
A warming island’s mice are breeding out of control and eating seabirds. An extermination is planned
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:03:14
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Mice accidentally introduced to a remote island near Antarctica 200 years ago are breeding out of control because of climate change, and they are eating seabirds and causing major harm in a special nature reserve with “unique biodiversity.”
Now conservationists are planning a mass extermination using helicopters and hundreds of tons of rodent poison, which needs to be dropped over every part of Marion Island’s 115 square miles (297 square kilometers) to ensure success.
If even one pregnant mouse survives, their prolific breeding ability means it may have all been for nothing.
The Mouse-Free Marion project — pest control on a grand scale — is seen as critical for the ecology of the uninhabited South African territory and the wider Southern Ocean. It would be the largest eradication of its kind if it succeeds.
This undated handout photo shows a house mouse on Marion Island, South Africa. (Stefan and Janine Schoombie via AP)
The island is home to globally significant populations of nearly 30 bird species and a rare undisturbed habitat for wandering albatrosses — with their 10-foot wingspan — and many others.
Undisturbed, at least, until stowaway house mice arrived on seal hunter ships in the early 1800s, introducing the island’s first mammal predators.
The past few decades have been the most significant for the damage the mice have caused, said Dr. Anton Wolfaardt, the Mouse-Free Marion project manager. He said their numbers have increased hugely, mainly due to rising temperatures from climate change, which has turned a cold, windswept island into a warmer, drier, more hospitable home.
“They are probably one of the most successful animals in the world. They’ve got to all sorts of places,” Wolfaardt said. But now on Marion Island, “their breeding season has been extended, and this has resulted in a massive increase in the densities of mice.”
Mice don’t need encouragement. They can reproduce from about 60 days old and females can have four or five litters a year, each with seven or eight babies.
Rough estimates indicate there are more than a million mice on Marion Island. They are feeding on invertebrates and, more and more, on seabirds — both chicks in their nests and adults.
This undated photo shows sooty albatrosses on Marion Island, part of the Port Edwards Islands, a South African territory in the southern Indian Ocean near Antarctica. (Stefan Schoombie via AP)
A single mouse will feed on a bird several times its size. Conservationists snapped a photo of one perched on the bloodied head of a wandering albatross chick.
The phenomenon of mice eating seabirds has been recorded on only a handful of the world’s islands.
The scale and frequency of mice preying on seabirds on Marion has risen alarmingly, Wolfaardt said, after the first reports of it in 2003. He said the birds have not developed the defense mechanisms to protect themselves against these unfamiliar predators and often sit there while mice nibble away at them. Sometimes multiple mice swarm over a bird.
Conservationists estimate that if nothing is done, 19 seabird species will disappear from the island in 50 to 100 years, he said.
“This incredibly important island as a haven for seabirds has a very tenuous future because of the impacts of mice,” Wolfaardt said.
The eradication project is a single shot at success, with not even a whisker of room for error. Burgeoning mice and rat populations have been problematic for other islands. South Georgia, in the southern Atlantic, was declared rodent-free in 2018 after an eradication, but that was a multi-year project; the one on Marion could be the biggest single intervention.
Wolfaardt said four to six helicopters will likely be used to drop up to 550 tons of rodenticide bait across the island. Pilots will be given exact flight lines and Wolfaardt’s team will be able to track the drop using GPS mapping.
The bait has been designed to not affect the soil or the island’s water sources. It shouldn’t harm the seabirds, who feed out at sea, and won’t have negative impacts for the environment, Wolfaardt said. Some animals will be affected at an individual level, but those species will recover.
“There’s no perfect solution in these kinds of things,” he said. “There is nothing that just zaps mice and nothing else.”
The eradication project is a partnership between BirdLife South Africa and the national Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, which designated Marion Island as a special nature reserve with the highest level of environmental protection. It has a weather and research station but is otherwise uninhabited and dedicated to conservation.
The department said the eradication of mice was “essential if the unique biodiversity of the island is to be preserved.”
Wolfaardt said the amount of planning needed means a likely go-ahead date in 2027. The project also needs to raise around $25 million — some of which has been funded by the South African government — and get final regulatory approvals from authorities.
Scientists have tried to control the mice of Marion in the past.
They were already a pest for researchers in the 1940s, so five domestic cats were introduced. By the 1970s, there were around 2,000 feral cats on the island, killing half a million seabirds per year. The cats were eliminated by introducing a feline flu virus and hunting down any survivors.
Islands are critical to conservation efforts, but fragile. The Island Conservation organization says they are “extinction epicenters” and 75% of all species that have gone extinct lived on islands. About 95% of those were bird species.
“This really is an ecological restoration project,” Wolfaardt said. “It’s one of those rare conservation opportunities where you solve once and for all a conservation threat.”
___
AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
veryGood! (7511)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Can Carbon Offsets Save a Fragile Band of Belize’s Tropical Rainforest?
- Iowa's Caitlin Clark breaks Steph Curry's NCAA record for 3-pointers in a season
- Chris Evans and His Leading Lady Alba Baptista Match Styles at Pre-Oscars Party
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Lionel Messi injury: Here’s the latest before Inter Miami vs. Montreal, how to watch Sunday
- Iowa vs. Michigan: Caitlin Clark leads Hawkeyes to Big Ten tournament final
- 15 Best-Selling Products on Amazon That Will Help You Adjust to Daylight Savings
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Mike Tyson back in the ring? Just saying those words is a win for 'Iron Mike' (and boxing)
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- The 2 states that don't do daylight saving — and how they got rid of time changes for good
- Broncos are sending receiver Jerry Jeudy to the Browns for two draft picks, AP sources say
- Rupert Murdoch, 92, plans to marry for 5th time
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Trump supporters hoping to oust Wisconsin leader say they have enough signatures to force recall
- Becky G's Sultry 2024 Oscars Ensemble Is One You Need to See
- Record rainfall douses Charleston, South Carolina, as responders help some out of flood waters
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
2 women drove a man’s body to a bank to withdraw his money, Ohio police say
Costco is tapping into precious metals: First gold bars sold out now silver coins are too
Where does menthol cigarette ban stand? Inside the high-stakes battle at Biden's door.
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Great Barrier Reef undergoing mass coral bleaching event for 5th time in nearly a decade
Oscars 2024: Chris Hemsworth and Elsa Pataky Have an A-Thor-able Date Night
States have hodgepodge of cumbersome rules for enforcing sunshine laws