Major hurricanes likely pushed a small Bahamanian bird to extinction » Yale Climate Connections

Date:


Transcript:

Some island-dwelling animals only live in one place, so if a major hurricane hits that island, it could be catastrophic for the species.

For example, a small bird called the Bahama nuthatch once lived on the island of Grand Bahama.

The bird’s population had declined for years, mainly because of habitat loss and non-native predators.

But last decade, Hurricanes Matthew and Dorian each slammed into Grand Bahama and likely wiped out the species entirely.

David Pereira, a researcher at the University of Birmingham, documented the nuthatch’s decline during a field study in 2018.

Pereira: “It makes me feel really sad, obviously, because I saw one of the last nuthatches.”

Climate change is now making hurricanes stronger, which increases the risk to isolated island species.

So Pereira worked with other researchers to create a watchlist of the species most threatened by hurricanes.

He says it can be used to prioritize conservation efforts, like setting up breeding programs for these species before catastrophe strikes.

Pereira: “We are running against time, because we can already see from the nuthatch case that one bird potentially has gone extinct because of a hurricane, and we don’t want this to happen to other species.”

Reporting credit: Ethan Freedman / ChavoBart Digital Media



Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

How the Cambridge Program Has Found a U.S. Foothold

When offering students the chance to...

Disability Rights Leader Alice Wong Dies At 51

Alice Wong, the California disability rights activist who...

Play, Curiosity, and the Joy of Math with Dan Finkel

In a podcast episode with Dan Finkel,...