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About 15 million ducks and geese migrate annually to Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama, said Mike Brasher, a biologist with the Gulf Coast Joint Venture, a partnership among government, nonprofits and landowners for bird habitat preservation. When shorebirds are added, he said, the total could reach 50 million. Their habitat has been diminishing for years because of sinking, erosion, hurricanes and pollution, said John Pitre, a wildlife biologist with the USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service. The oil spill just makes things worse. Agencies involved with the new program "had wanted to do something like this before, but never had the funding," Pitre said. Many birds that spend cold-weather months in the Gulf region had already flown north ahead of the spill, which was triggered by an April 20 rig explosion that killed 11 workers. But scientists say the danger will be waiting when they return
-- some as early as this month- even if the leak has been plugged. Norton acknowledged that some species might not seek out the alternative habitat
-- especially those that instinctively return annually to the same places. However, he said, if they make even a quick stopover in the newly developed habitat before continuing to the Gulf, they may go back after finding their former haunts polluted. The piping plover, a shorebird on the federal endangered species list, spends winters nibbling tiny invertebrates on sandy Southern beaches and probably won't be attracted to the new habitats at first, said biologist Francie Cuthbert of the University of Minnesota. But if the oil kills off their usual food supply, some might fly inland. Other birds, such as the common loon of the Great Lakes region, prefer open-water habitat and probably will head directly for the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, said Joe Kaplan, a biologist in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. James Gentz, a rice farmer in Winnie, Texas on the Gulf coast, has signed two contracts for about $84,000 to keep 720 of his 1,200 acres flooded through March 31. Keeping fields that would normally lie fallow this year flooded through the winter will be time-consuming, but Gentz believes he will turn a profit while helping the birds survive. "For generations, they've been following a migratory pattern. Hopefully, if they get down south, they'll come back to where we're trying to help them," Gentz said.
[Associated
Press;
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