Hawai'i State News

Christmas bird count focuses on endangered forest species in Big Island reserve

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To wrap up the Year of the Forest Birds (ka Makahiki o Nā Manu Nahele) in Hawai‘i, more than a dozen volunteers on Dec. 14 joined staff from the state Division of Forestry and Wildlife to count birds.

The count took place on a warm sunny day at the Pu’u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve on the Big Island , with two spotting teams looking for endangered and threatened species in perhaps the richest native forest bird habitat anywhere in Hawai‘i.

More than a dozen volunteers joined staff from the state Division of Forestry and Wildlife on Dec. 14 to count birds in the Pu’u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve on the Big Island. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)
More than a dozen volunteers joined staff from the state Division of Forestry and Wildlife on Dec. 14 to count birds in the Pu’u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve on the Big Island. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)

After four hours of counting, the teams tallied 199 individuals. The volunteers also helped set and replenish traps that help keep predators like rats, cats and mongoose away from the birds.

Christmas bird counts began as a holiday tradition before the turn of the 20th century, when hunters engaged in what was known as the Christmas Side Hunt.

In 1900, with bird populations declining, the Audubon Society introduced annual bird surveys, later renamed Christmas Bird Counts, which annually have more than 1,000 count locations across the globe.

Hawai‘i has not participated all 125 years, but the anniversary along with this year’s forest birds commemoration gives special meaning to this season’s count, said a news release from the Department of Land and Natural Resources.

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So far, the Big Island reserve has remained free of avian malaria, which is causing the extinction of some species of native birds, particularly those in the Honeycreeper family.

Volunteers and state biologists were counting endangered and threatening birds on the Big Island, including the ʻapapane. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)
Volunteers and state biologists were counting endangered and threatening birds on the Big Island, including the ʻapapane. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)

State bird biologist Bret Mossman told the volunteers: “We haven’t had too many impacts from the mosquito borne disease on our native bird populations here. And so, we’re very fortunate to still have three endangered species, the ʻakiapōlāʻau, Hawaiʻi akepa and ʻalawī. And then we have ʻiʻiwi, ʻapapane, ʻōmaʻo, ʻelepaio and ʻamakihi.”

Andrea Buskirk, an outreach and education specialist with the state, added: “It’s a wonderful opportunity because this protected forest, we’ve highlighted it as a forest that persists, as so many conservation tools have been applied. That’s why we find ourselves in the home of the endangered birds and alongside our outplantings and within the largest rat grid in the state.”

She said this area highlights the management that allows the species to persist.

With binoculars dangling around their necks and tally sheets in their hands, the volunteers walked through the thick native forest. Upon hearing the call of a bird, all eyes focused skyward to the treetops.

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The bird counts, which are considered a great citizen science opportunity, are patterned after those of the Audubon Society, with the results also going to that organization.

A volunteer looks for birds during a count with state biologists in the Pu’u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve on the Big Island. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)
A volunteer looks for birds during a count with state biologists in the Pu’u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve on the Big Island. (Photo Credit: Department of Land and Natural Resources)

“Today, we’re highlighting hot spot areas, hoping to just share about these special birds where we can find them,” Buskirk said. “So, we’re influencing the count in that way. This is for some people, a once in a lifetime opportunity to meet these birds in their habitat.”

Jessica Middleton said she always wanted to go to an area where the general public can’t go.

“It’s a restricted access kind of place, which makes it extra attractive,” she said. “I love all native species.”

Alex Wang another of the count leaders, said: “It was originally a Christmas Bird hunt when folks, instead of shooting all the birds, decided to start counting birds and we’re able to totally flip that. Now, you know the idea of going out and shooting as many birds as you can on Christmas is laughable and it’s not what we do anymore. So, it’s really a nice tradition.”  

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The data collected by observers over the past century allows researchers, conservation biologists, wildlife agencies and other interested individuals to study the long-term health and status of bird populations across North America.

When combined with other surveys, it provides a picture of how the continent’s bird populations have changed in time and space over the past 125 years. The long-term perspective is vital for conservationists. It informs strategies to protect birds and their habitat and helps identify environmental issues with implications for people as well, the release said.

To watch a video about the bird count, click here.

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