CDFG Releases: Rare Marbled Murrelet Fledgling
Contact:
Dr. Dave Jessup, DFG Wildlife Veterinarian, 831-469-1726
Carol Singleton, DFG Communications Office, 916-327-9948
A tiny bird found by a little girl near a Santa Cruz beach turned out
to be a rare species, amazing and delighting California bird biologists.
According to the Department of Fish and Game (DFG), a young girl
discovered the bird June 26 in the woods at Ano Nuevo State Park in
Santa Cruz County.
Along with her parents, she reported the find to State Park Chief
Ranger Gary Strachan, who immediately recognized the bird as a fledgling
marbled murrelet. The murrelet is listed as threatened under the
Endangered Species Act.
Studies have estimated that only 2,000 murrelets remain in California
and Oregon. Their numbers have plummeted over the past decade due to
destruction of habitat, predation, gill nets and other factors.
Biologists know that small murrelet populations have been struggling for
survival in the redwood and conifer forests in Santa Cruz and southern
San Mateo counties, as well as further north in Humboldt County, but
they are very rarely seen. The discovery of a baby marbled murrelet is
particularly unusual; the last time it happened at Ano Nuevo was the mid
1990s.
Strachan brought the bird to DFG's Marine Wildlife Veterinary Care
and Research Center in Santa Cruz, where Dr. Dave Jessup and his staff
evaluated the fledgling and found it to be in generally good health.
Although they spend most of their lives at sea, murrelets nest high in
the branches of trees found in California's old-growth forests, which
grow inland, far away from where they feed. Mating pairs lay just one
egg a year. Once the fledglings are ready to leave the nest, they fly
with their parents to the sea - which can be as far as 50 miles away -
to feed for the first time. Jessup said he suspects that the baby bird
became separated from its parents on this first crucial flight.
After consulting with DFG seabird experts Esther Burkett and Laird
Henkel, as well as representatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Dr. Jessup decided that the fledgling was not in need of
long-term care or rehabilitation and should be released with minimal
human intervention, thus increasing its chances of successfully
reuniting with its parents.
DFG kept the bird overnight and hand-fed it as much as it could eat in
order to prepare it for release. The U.S. Geological Survey also banded
the little bird - a task that is usually very difficult with this
elusive species.
Early on June 27, under the cover of the morning mist, the young bird
was released at Ano Nuevo Beach. It promptly dove under the water and
resurfaced seconds later, appearing to be quite at home in its ocean
habitat.