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The roughly 10-acre islet has shrunk by about 50 percent over the past decade. Like other coastal wetlands, it is eroding from storms and rising sea levels, while levees prevent the Mississippi River from depositing fresh sediment. Brown pelicans seek elevated spots with short grasses for nesting. When they washed away, the birds abandoned Pelican Island for other places
-- some of which are eroding as well, and the pace may quicken if oil kills vegetation holding sediment in place. "It could be the strikeout punch," said Gregory Butcher, bird conservation director for the Audubon Society. Despite their gangly appearance -- their long necks, stubby legs and wingspans that often exceed 7 feet prompted Butcher to jokingly liken them to to B-52s
-- they are nature's perfect anglers, winging above the sea with keen eyes seeking schools of menhaden or minnows. They suddenly plunge and emerge with huge mouthfuls, straining out water through the pouches beneath their bills. The pelicans might ingest enough oil to sicken or kill them, depending on the amount, said Wes Tunnell, coastal ecology and oil spill expert at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi. Oil also causes matted plumage, making it harder to stay afloat when they rest on the water's surface and boosting the risk of hypothermia. If oil coats the waters around islands and marshes, it could cause prey fish numbers to plummet, said Aaron Pierce, a shore bird specialist at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, La. "Even if the pelicans can avoid the sheen, they must be able to forage within a reasonable distance to keep their chicks alive," said biologist Paul Leberg of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. "We've been very lucky the oil has stayed so far offshore." Some advocates want the government to return the pelicans to the endangered species list. But scientists generally say it's too early to decide, and Philip Kloer, a spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said re-listing is not being considered for now. Scott Walter, a Louisiana-Lafayette wildlife biologist studying brown pelicans on Gulf barrier islands, said he will try to determine how the oil spill affects their reproduction. Restoring their endangered status, Walter said, might become necessary if food contamination and habitat loss cause a population crash. "They're in a very precarious position," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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