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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, October 15, 2007

Protection sought for 2 rare birds on Kauai

Associated Press

A national wildlife group is trying to get two rare birds that live only on Kaua'i a spot on the U.S. endangered species list.

The American Bird Conservancy and a noted Hawai'i scientist have submitted a petition to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service on behalf of the 'akeke'e and the 'akikiki, both of which live in the higher elevations of the Alaka'i Wilderness.

Populations of the two birds have shrunk to all-time lows this year based on surveys conducted in April and May, according to the American Bird Conservancy.

"The 'akikiki and the 'akeke'e are seriously in trouble," said George Fenwick, president of the American Bird Conservancy. "The strongest available measures such as captive breeding, fencing out and removal of invasive species ... are all necessary to prevent these species from going extinct." Their habitats are threatened by alien plants, feral pigs, diseases and inclement weather, the group said.

The Fish and Wildlife Service has 90 days to decide whether to conduct a yearlong status review of the birds, which is required before adding them to the endangered species list, said agency spokesman Ken Foote.

"People's observations were that the 'akeke'e has disappeared from several areas where it had been easy to find in the past," said Erik VanderWerf, a scientist for the Pacific Rim Conservation, a consulting group. "And the 'akikiki have been definitely in trouble and a candidate for listing since 1994."

The 'akikiki are small honeycreepers, dark above and light below, with a pink bill. Their population could be as low as 782, down from about 7,000 birds in 1970, said the American Bird Conservancy.

The 'akeke'e also are honeycreepers, yellow and green with short blue bills and long, notched tails. Their population is estimated to be as low as 2,506 compared with about 8,000 in 2000, the group said.

The birds need more research on what's causing them to die off, VanderWerf said.

"We don't really know what the causes are," he said, although mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria and avian pox are suspected.