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On A Rocky Maine Island, Puffins Making A Tenuous Comeback

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I'm Scott Simon. East Coast seabirds have had a tough year. They've been battered by storms and disruptions in the food chain. Among them, the sturdy little Atlantic puffin. Now, here in the United States, their numbers dwindle to just a single nesting pair by 1901. Since then, thanks to the Audubon Society's Project Puffin, they've made a comeback. But as WBUR's Fred Bever reports, the puffins are now facing some new threats.

FRED BEVER, BYLINE: Rocky, windswept Eastern Egg Rock, about six miles off the coast of Maine, was once a haven for a hugely diverse bird population. But in the 1800s, fishermen decimated their ranks for food and for feathers. When ornithologist Stephen Kress first visited 40 years ago, the seven-acre island was nearly barren, with only grass and gulls left. Not a puffin in sight. Not even an old puffin bone.

STEPHEN KRESS: But it had great habitat because there were great boulders on the island and I could imagine the puffins standing on top of them.

BEVER: No imagination is needed now. Thanks to a relocation experiment pioneered by Kress and his co-workers in the Audubon Society's Project Puffin, this treeless little island is now kind of a bird tornado.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRDS SQUAWKING)

BEVER: Island manager Maggie Post leads the way.

MAGGIE POST: So, there are eggs and chicks. I guess I can lead the way up there. We'll go single file. So, try to step on bare rock and our trails, if you can.

BEVER: In peak years, more than 200 of the orange-and-black beaked puffins nest here. Ten other bird species, including the endangered roseate tern, have been tempted into their slipstream, with an assist from hand-made burrows, decoys and recorded birdcalls. In nesting season, humans are posted to wave off predators such as Black-backed gulls and eagles.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRDS SQUAWKING)

BEVER: Kress heads to a bird blind out on the perimeter. He's surrounded by a whirl of laughing gulls and terns. They're mostly what's heard, here: puffins are silent above ground. But a dozen or so puffin loaf - that's the scientific term - loaf on a jutting rock nearby. It's a group of little bird-faced jesters in tucked-back tuxedos, all seeming to ponder the sea and the sky.

KRESS: They keep their distance. They don't ever - oops, one goes, the others thinks maybe it's time to leave too. Yup, yeah.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRDS SQUAWKING)

BEVER: Kress snaps pictures of puffins on the wing, as they bring staples like herring and hake to chicks nesting deep inside the rocks.

KRESS: So, there's two puffins flying around, coming in with food. So, you see the fish, shiny in their beak even from here. I think it's two or three herring, which is good news.

(SOUNDBITE OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING)

BEVER: Herring are good news now because last year, they never arrived in local waters. Their absence coincided with the warmest water temperatures ever recorded in the Gulf of Maine, part of a general warming trend documented over the last decade. Instead, a more southerly species, called butterfish, showed up. Butterfish are fine, even nutritious, for adult puffins. But they're too big for the babies' gullets.

KRESS: Last year, the puffin chicks were surrounded by big butterfish that they couldn't swallow, and most of the, about half of the chicks starved.

BEVER: The herring are back now, and there are fewer butterfish around. Still, workers are finding a new southern invader, uneaten, in puffin and tern nests. And after last year's hard winter, the numbers of birds, nests and surviving chicks are low. Kress says it's too soon to tell if this is a long-term trend.

KRESS: I think the seabirds will tell us about the changes. If the oceans are changing so that the seabirds can't survive here, this is not good news for humans either.

BEVER: Island workers do get depressed about it all. But they have a pick-me-up: grubbing for puffin chicks.

POST: Yeah, we have a few tools we're using for this grubbing here. One of them...

BEVER: Maggie Post and resident intern Kate McNamee worm their way far down in a jumble of boulders.

KATE MCNAMEE: He's on my stick. He's standing on my fly swatter. He's really close to you.

POST: OK, I've got him.

MCNAMEE: Good.

BEVER: McNamee emerges with a 10-inch beaked bundle of gray and white fluff. It has a distinctive crown, a little like a bald-headed friar.

MCNAMEE: He's got male pattern feathers.

POST: He's got a friar's haircut.

MCNAMEE: Friar Tuck.

(LAUGHTER)

POST: Yeah, Friar Tuck.

BEVER: Friar Tuck is banded, measured, weighed and returned to his burrow. With luck, in a few weeks this new Maine native will fledge and take on the mature puffin's distinctive colors. And after dark, one night soon, he'll head out onto uncertain seas. For NPR News, I'm Fred Bever. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

A Columbia University graduate, Fred began his journalism career as a print reporter in Vermont, then came to Maine Public in 2001 as its political reporter, as well as serving as a host for a variety of Maine Public Radio and Maine Public Television programs. Fred later went on to become news director for New England Public Radio in Western Massachusetts and worked as a freelancer for National Public Radio and a number of regional public radio stations, including WBUR in Boston and NHPR in New Hampshire.