On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 10:12:37PM -0400, John Sessoms wrote:
>
> Brown Pelicans were one of the "success stories" from the Endangered  
> Species Act. They'd made a comeback to the point of being removed from  
> "endangered" to "threatened". Many of the rescued birds are parents who  
> cannot get back to their nests. The chicks are going to starve.
>
> At least one whole generation is likely to be lost, and we may be  
> looking at an extinction level event.

That's hardly the case for the Brown Pelican as a whole.

The Gulf Brown Pelican only reflects one subspecies (around 1/3 of
the worldwide Brown Pelican population).  Of those, 2/3 do live in
the Gulf, and the oil spill is indeed a serious problem for them.
But the situation is no worse that the problems caused by DDT, and
that wasn't restricted to a small geographic area.  A resettling
program from unaffected areas (the Pacific or Atlantic coasts, and
Peru - home to 2/3 of the world's Brown Pelicans) could handle the
problem, as has already been shown once.

It's definitely a serious problem, but extinction is unlikely.


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