Forwarded by Jane Clark
DECREASED WATER QUALITY MAY POSE THREAT TO MIGRATING WATERFOWL-SCIENTISTS
WILL TRACK IOWA DUCKS FROM OUTER SPACE
By Lowell Washburn, Iowa Department of Natural Resources
Migratory waterfowl are currently winging their way toward ancestral nesting
grounds. And although millions of migrating birds will fly across Iowa
during the next several weeks, scientists will be keeping an especially
watchful eye on the daily activities of seventeen lesser scaup ducks.
Following their arrival on Mississippi River Pool 19 last week, the
two-pound birds [also known as bluebills] were captured, anesthetized, and
then surgically implanted with state-of-the-art satellite transmitters.
Following a two-hour recovery, the ducks [all females] were released to
rejoin the northward migration.
According to Louisiana State University Professor and project coordinator,
Alan Afton, this high-tech endeavor will allow scientists to chart the
scaups' migration paths, habitat use, and ultimate survival. Although
previous land based telemetry studies have been conducted in the state, this
is the first time Iowa waterfowl have been monitored from space.
Afton, who has been studying scaup for more than thirty years, hopes the
experiment will shed light into factors affecting the species' overall
survival. Scaup populations have waned by as much as 50 percent during
recent years --- down from 7 million breeding birds inventoried during the
1970s to around 3.5 million today.
"While most other duck species are holding their own or even showing an
increase, scaup numbers continue to decline," says Afton. "Although there
are theories, no one can say for certain why the decline is occurring. What
we do know is that migrating scaup are in really good [physical] condition
when they arrive at Keokuk each spring. But by the time those birds arrive
in northwestern Minnesota, they are in poor body condition."
Ongoing water quality studies have revealed that 97 percent of surveyed
wetlands in north central and northwestern Iowa contain measurable levels of
herbicides, pesticides, or other chemical contaminants. Additional
pollutants include widely-ranging levels of phosphorus and nitrogen. Many
researchers suspect the pollution is disrupting aquatic food chains.
Biologists note that spring migration is a time when female scaup stoke up
on the natural aquatic foods needed to build nutrient reserves essential to
egg production. Failure to acquire those reserves could result in lowered
nesting success and significant decreases in the annual recruitment of
young. Tiny crustaceans known as amphipods represent the scaup's most
important food source as ducks migrate across Iowa's interior.
"For lesser scaup to maintain the healthy body condition needed for egg
production, they must have amphipods," says DNR waterfowl biologist, Guy
Zenner. "Historically, it was no problem for scaup and other water birds to
find that nutritional source in Iowa. Today, wetland water quality has been
compromised to the point that amphipods no longer exist in most of our
marshlands. Scaup end up surviving on alternate food sources which are
insufficient to increase or even maintain critical body weights."
"It's a water quality issue and everyone living in Iowa should be very
dismayed by these findings," added Zenner.
During the next several days those seventeen radio implanted females are
expected to leave the Mississippi River and disperse northwest across Iowa.
As hens continue toward the boreal forest breeding grounds of northwestern
Canada, space stationed satellites will track and report the ducks'
whereabouts on a daily basis. In most instances, the information will be
"location specific" where biologists can pinpoint the exact wetlands
northbound scaup are utilizing.
Ducks Unlimited personnel are currently constructing a website that will
allow the public to view the project's outer space observations. Beginning
mid-April, the radioed scaups' progress can also be viewed on the Iowa DNR's
web site. Transmitters are expected to provide data through the 2008
migration.
"Once we pinpoint the actual wetlands scaup are using, we can go in and
sample those locations for food," says Afton. "Once we determine what types
of wetlands the birds are using along the course of their migration, we can
go in and look at the landscape features affecting those habitats."
"If we can identify a fairly narrow corridor that scaup are utilizing, then
we can focus on improving the condition of those particular wetlands," said
Afton.
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