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Last stand for Hawaiian birds.


In Maui's Haleakala National Park Haleakala National Park (hä'lāä'kälä`), 29,824 acres (12,074 hectares), on Maui island, Hawaii. Haleakala volcano, 10,023 ft (3,055 m) high, has been dormant since the mid-1700s. , at an elevation of 7,000 feet, Hosmer Grove serves as a rather enchanting memorial to a failed experiment. In 1910, German-born Ralph Hosmer planted 86 varieties of non-native trees in Maui, including the eucalyptus trees that have now grown to great heights in the grove named after him. Although the attempt to find new forest crops for Hawaii was a commercial flop, Hosmer's grove remains as a last holdout for many of the islands' increasingly endangered native birds, and it is still possible to see there such species as the apapane and the gorgeous i'iwi.

The first human colonizers found 140 native breeding bird species in Hawaii, many of them found nowhere else, but half of them are now extinct. According to state accounts, 71 species remain, and 32 are federally listed, 15 of them either extinct or on the edge, with less than 500 individuals remaining. In fact, Hawaii has more endangered species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S.  than any other U.S. state.

Renate Gassman is a German-born bird veterinarian veterinarian /vet·er·i·nar·i·an/ (vet?er-i-nar´e-an) a person trained and authorized to practice veterinary medicine and surgery; a doctor of veterinary medicine.

vet·er·i·nar·i·an
n.
 who has worked with Hawaii's critically endangered crow, the 'alala. (Captive breeding captive breeding

mating programs designed for use with animals kept in captivity. See also hand mating.
 efforts are underway, but only two 'alalas remain in the wild.) Gassman, who leads birding tours, says that Hawaii's native species fell victim to many predators, beginning with the rats that stowed away in canoes with early Polynesian settlers.

Tree-climbing rats feast on bird eggs, and further damage is done by feral cats, pigs, goats, dogs and mongooses--all introduced species. The islands' biggest native mammal is the hoary bat. Alien species introductions continue at a rate of 20 per year, slipping through on airline flights, in the mail and as ship cargo. In contrast, scientists say new species are introduced naturally in Hawaii only once every 10,000 years.

Deforestation deforestation

Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use.
 was also a factor in bird declines. By 1890, 80 percent of all native forest had been logged. Even more ominously, global warming is pushing mosquito populations into the higher elevations, threatening native bird populations with avian malaria.

Hawaiian wildlife managers work with nonprofit groups to cull ferals, a tactic that has sometimes put them at odds with animal rights activists. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an international nonprofit organization that supports Animal Rights and has spawned a tremendous amount of conflict and controversy from its inception.  (PETA Quadrillion (10 to the 15th power). See space/time. ), for instance, has opposed efforts by The Nature Conservancy (TNC (hardware) TNC - A threaded version of a BNC. ) to snare and kill Hawaii's feral feral

untamed; often used in the sense of having escaped from domesticity and run wild.
 pigs.

Former federal wildlife official Sue Daniels says, "I agree with many of PETA's positions. However, when extinctions and severe endangerment result from introduced species, I believe the non-native animals must be removed as humanely as possible. This is precisely what TNC is doing in Hawaii." PETA advocates live trapping and using birth-control methods.

In Hosmer Grove, a natural gorge puts visitors at eye level with the tree canopy, making both visual and auditory contact with the i'iwi. These bright red rainforest honeycreepers have long, curved bills that are ideally suited for sipping nectar from Hawaiian lobelias. But these plants, too, are endangered. CONTACT: Hawaii Audubon Society, (808)528-1432, www.hawaiiaudubon.com; Paths in Paradise, (808)573-2022, www.mauibirdhikes.com.
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Title Annotation:Hosmer Grove
Author:Motavalli, Jim
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1U9HI
Date:May 1, 2004
Words:500
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