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Bird flu kills nearly 1,500 threatened Caspian terns on Lake Michigan islands

Dozens of dead birds sit on a rocky beach surrounded by water. A worker in a protective suit is in the background picking them up for disposal.
Sumner Matteson
/
Wisconsin DNR
Hundreds of Caspian terns died from bird flu on a Wisconsin island.

Wildlife biologists are finding whole colonies of birds dead or dying on islands in Lake Michigan. The Caspian terns are listed as threatened in Michigan and endangered in Wisconsin.

“Caspian terns are magnificent birds. They've got that striking black cap, and they fly along, looking down at the water while they fly and then suddenly plunge into the water to catch fish. They're exciting to watch,” said Lisa Williams, a contaminants specialist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

In recent years, the bird’s population has been growing. In 2018, it peaked at about 10,000 Caspian terns in the Great Lakes region. But then high water levels made nesting difficult for the birds.

A group of Caspian terns flying close to a rocky beach with driftwood, with water in the background
Courtesy
/
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Caspian terns are the largest terns in the world. They migrate to the Great Lakes region to nest.

Now, it appears that Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, or bird flu, is killing hundreds and hundreds of the birds.

“Caspian terns nest very close together, and for a disease that's transmitted through the air, they're in close enough proximity that that can happen fairly readily on their colonies,” Williams explained.

The result is at least 1,476 adult terns dead on Lake Michigan islands.

Sumner Matteson is an avian ecologist with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. He said what he found on an island off of Wisconsin’s Door Peninsula was horrific.

“Seeing hundreds of dead birds scattered in a line before you with others dying among those, and it's a — it's a feeling of helplessness, knowing that there's nothing, absolutely nothing, you can do for those birds.”

Matteson said he’s never seen anything so traumatic in his 42 years on the job.

Seeing hundreds of dead birds scattered in a line before you with others dying among those, and it's a — it's a feeling of helplessness, knowing that there's nothing, absolutely nothing, you can do for those birds.
Sumner Matteson, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

On other islands near the Door Peninsula, more birds were found dead. Sadie O’Dell is a wildlife biologist at the Gravel Island National Wildlife Refuge. She said there were birds that were still alive could barely hold their heads up. They were experiencing tremors from the neurological damage caused by the virus. Some of the birds were on their nests, still trying to incubate eggs when they died.

Matteson said at this point, am estimated 64% of the adult Caspian terns in Wisconsin are dead.

“Absolutely devastating. Catastrophic. It's going to take years for the Wisconsin population to recover,” he said, but after thinking about it, he decided it would more likely take decades.

In Michigan, on Bellow Island in the Grand Traverse Bay, another scientist discovered colonies that were wiped out. Jim Ludwig is an environmental consultant who’s studied birds like the Caspian tern in the Great Lakes for decades.

“Last count, prior to the time we were out there, was 201 nests, and we found 255 dead adults,” he said.

Likely more than that died elsewhere. Some might have died somewhere out in Lake Michigan. Scavengers might have carried off some of the others.

Francie Cuthbert is a professor with the University of Minnesota’s Department of Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Biology. She said these massive die-offs also mean the loss of a new generation of Caspian terns.

“No young are being produced, and then the loss of all of these adults is serious.”

These large terns can live about 30 years. They don’t start breeding until they’re at least three years old.

Until we really have a full tally on how many birds have died, we're not going to be able to model the impact on the population, but it's definitely going to have a deep drop.
Francie Cuthbert, University of Minnesota

“Losing all these older, experienced breeders is also very important because they tend to increase in terms of their productivity and just their knowledge of how to raise young,” Cuthbert explained.

Why Caspian terns are being hit so hard by avian influenza, but other close-nesting seabirds have not experienced the same kind of devastation, is baffling to the scientists. There have been deaths among ring-billed gulls, pelicans and others, but not at the rate of Caspian tern deaths with one exception, double-crested cormorants.

Cuthbert said it’s hard to say how critical this will be to the future of the bird.

“Until we really have a full tally on how many birds have died, we're not going to be able to model the impact on the population, but it's definitely going to have a deep drop.”

Lisa Williams with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says the numbers definitely could go higher.

“The researchers that discovered this are visiting other colonies this week and will definitely be on the lookout, particularly at places where Caspian terns have nested in the past.”

It might be a while before wildlife officials can determine just how badly the avian flu has hit the Caspian tern population. It’s unclear what, if anything, can be done to help the birds.

A dead Caspian tern sits on a rocky beach. A small, fluffy grey-feathered Herring gull chick is under its wing.
Sumner Matteson
/
Wisconsin DNR
A Herring gull chick finds shelter under the wing of a dead Caspian tern.

Lester Graham reports for The Environment Report and previously hosted Stateside on Fridays. He has reported on public policy, politics, and issues regarding race and gender inequity. He was previously with The Environment Report at Michigan Radio from 1998-2010.
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