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Recovery of Different Kinds of At-risk Animals Can Raise Conflicts

时间:2022-08-29 08:59:22

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Recovery of Different Kinds of At-risk Animals Can Raise Conflicts

Wildlife experts in the United States are struggling with a problem: As some kinds of threatened animals increase in number, they put pressure on other at-risk creatures.

Experts say these kinds of situations involve tradeoffs. But they do not necessarily show problems with special protection programs or the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

These tradeoffs show the importance of protecting what some scientists call biological communities, rather than individual species.

Winners and losers

The famous bald eagle's comeback has pressured rare water birds. Peregrine falcons1 are also making a comeback. But they threaten the birds called the California least tern and Western snowy plover2. And, off the California coast, attacks from protected white sharks are hurting the recovery of threatened sea otters3.

Stuart Pimm is with Duke University in North Carolina. He is an extinction4 specialist.

"Clearly there are occasions when we get these conflicts between species that we're trying to protect," Pimm said. "But is it a major worry in conservation? No," he added.

Conservation means the protection of animals, plants, and natural resources.

Bruce Stein is a scientist with the National Wildlife Federation5.

Stein suggested that animal recoveries can produce tradeoffs. That is because some animals are more adaptable6 than others to changes in the climate or land.

Stein said, "A lot of ecosystems7 where these things are occurring are a little out of whack8 to begin with because we've altered them in some way." He added, "With climate change, there are going to be winners and losers. The losers will tend to have specific habitat requirements, narrow ecological9 niches10, and often will be the ones already declining."

Nature at work

Recovery of America's national bird, the bald eagle, is a success. But in one area of Maine, the large bird creates a problem for the only U.S. breeding population of another kind of bird: great cormorants12.

"When they're disturbed by eagles, the adult cormorants will...leave their nests," said Don Lyons, a scientist at the National Audubon Society's Seabird Institute.

Then gulls13, crows, and other birds fly in to eat cormorant11 eggs and young. "If this happens repeatedly, an entire colony can fail," Lyons said.

Lyons' team organizes volunteers to camp near cormorant gatherings14 to keep away eagles.

But conflicts between recovering species and ones still in trouble do not always mean something is wrong, scientists say. Such conflicts could be a return to how things were before humans got involved.

John Fitzpatrick of Cornell University's Laboratory of Ornithology15 said, "When a population gets back to where it's having the same interactions with other organisms as before it went down, that's nature at work."

Lyons of the Audubon Society said the bald eagle is "challenging our...notions about what's normal" for prey16 such as great cormorants in New England. Cormorants might have been less numerous before eagles declined, he said.

Lyons noted17 that the eagle's recovery "complicates19 the conservation of certain other species." But he added that "their recovery is...a welcome complication."

Relationships between different animals are complex, said Stein of the National Wildlife Federation. He said it is often wiser to place effort on protecting and reconnecting habitats to support natural movements.

Words in This Story

tradeoff – n. : a situation in which you must choose between or balance two things that are opposite or cannot be had at the same time — often + between

species –n. (pl.) a group of animals or plants that are similar and can produce young animals or plants

extinction – n. : the state or situation that results when something (such as a plant or animal species) has died out completely

adaptable – adj. able to change or be changed in order to fit or work better in some situation or for some purpose : able to adapt or be adapted

alter – v. to change (something)

habitat – n. the place or type of place where a plant or animal naturally or normally lives or grows

disturb –v. to prevent someone or something from doing what it normally does

interaction – n. the act of coming together and having an effect on each other — often + with

notion – n. an idea or opinion

complicate18 – v. to make (something) more difficult or less simple


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