Laysan honeycreeper

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Laysan honeycreeper
Laysan honeycreeper in 1923.jpg
Male Laysan honeycreeper photographed by Donald R. Dickey in 1923, a few days before the extinction of the species
Status iucn3.1 EX.svg
Extinct  (1923)  (IUCN 3.1) [1]
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Fringillidae
Subfamily: Carduelinae
Genus: Himatione
Species:
H. fraithii
Binomial name
Himatione fraithii
Rothschild, 1892
PAT - Hawaii.gif
Map of the Hawaiian Islands showing Laysan Island in the lower left inset box
Synonyms [2]
List
  • H. fraithi
    Rothschild, 1892
  • H. freethii
    Rothschild, 1893–1900
  • H. freethi
    Rothschild, 1893–1900
  • H. frethii
    Schauinsland, 1899
  • H. sanguinea fraithii
    Hartert, 1919
  • H. sanguinea fraithi
    Delacour
  • H. sanguinea freethii
    Amadon, 1950
  • H. sanguinea freethi
    Pratt et al., 1987

The Laysan honeycreeper (Himatione fraithii), also known as the Laysan ʻapapane or Laysan honeyeater, is an extinct species of finch that was endemic to the island of Laysan in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. The bird was first recorded in 1828 and in 1892 received its scientific name from Walter Rothschild, who placed it in the genus Himatione along with the ʻapapane. The specific name, fraithii, refers to George D. Freeth, the self-appointed governor of Laysan, but was misspelled. Rothschild attempted to emend it to freethi in a later publication. This was accepted by most subsequent authors throughout the 20th century, and the bird was also considered a subspecies of the ʻapapane, as H. sanguinea freethii, for most of this time. By the 21st century, after further research, the original name was reinstated and it was considered a full species again. As a Hawaiian honeycreeper, a grouping within the finch subfamily Carduelinae, its ancestors are thought to have come from Asia.

Contents

The Laysan honeycreeper was 13–15 cm (5–6 in) long and its wing measured 64–69 mm (2.5–2.7 in). It was bright scarlet vermilion with a faint tint of golden orange on the head, breast and upper abdomen; the rest of its upper parts were orange scarlet. The lower abdomen was dusky gray that faded into brownish white, and the undertail covert feathers were grayish. The wings, tail, bill, and legs were dark brown, and the iris was black with a brown outline. Immature birds were brown with paler lower parts, and had green edges to their wing-covert feathers. The bill was slender and downturned. The sexes were alike, though the bill, wings, and tail were slightly shorter in the female. The ʻapapane differs from the Laysan honeycreeper in features such as being blood-red overall and having a longer bill. The song of the Laysan honeycreeper was described as low and sweet, consisting of several notes. Laysan is a remote coral island with an area of 3.6 km2 (1.4 sq mi). The honeycreeper lived throughout, but was most abundant in the interior among tall grass and low bushes near the open plain that bordered the island's lagoon.

This bird was very active and, though less trusting than other birds, sometimes entered buildings to hunt moths and for roosting at night. It was nectarivorous and insectivorous and, unlike the ʻapapane, also foraged on the ground. It gathered nectar and insects from flowers, such as caterpillars and moths called millers, only eating the soft parts of the latter. The nest was made of fine grass and rootlets with some dry grass. The breeding season was probably between January and June, and the clutch size was four or five eggs. The eggs were glossless white, with blotches and spots at the larger end. A typical egg measured 18 by 13.7 mm (0.71 by 0.54 in). The bird did not seem to be abundant when discovered and was considered the rarest of the island's birds. In 1903, domestic rabbits were introduced to the island and proceeded to destroy its vegetation. By the visit of the Tanager Expedition in 1923, Laysan had become barren and desert-like, and only three Laysan honeycreepers were found, one of which was filmed. A few days later, on April 23, a sandstorm hit the island, and the last birds perished due to lack of cover. The destruction of Laysan's vegetation led to the extinction of three out of five of its endemic land birds.

Taxonomy

The Laysan honeycreeper was first recorded on Laysan Island on April 3, 1828, by C. Isenbeck, surgeon of the Russian ship Moller, which was visiting the Hawaiian Islands (then called the Sandwich Islands, and the expedition called Laysan "Moller"). His report was published in an 1834 article by the German naturalist Heinrich von Kittlitz. Isenbeck referred to a "red bird" and a "humming bird" ("Colibri" in German), in both cases probably referring to the honeycreeper, the latter due to it feeding on nectar. [2] [3] [4] [5]

In 1892, the British zoologist and banker Walter Rothschild described and named seven new bird species from Hawaii, obtained by the New Zealand collectors Henry C. Palmer and George C. Munro in 1891, including a series of ten honeycreeper specimens from Laysan. These and other collectors had been sent to the Hawaiian Islands in 1890–93 to collect specimens for Rothschild's Natural History Museum at Tring in England. Rothschild named the honeycreeper Himatione fraithii (the type specimen was an adult male [6] ), and classified it as a member of Drepanidae which was recognized as a family at the time, commonly called the Hawaiian honeycreepers. He found it to resemble the ʻapapane (H. sanguinea), also of the genus Himatione , which is found across the main Hawaii archipelago, differing in several details. [2] [7] [8] [9] The generic name is derived from the Greek word himation , a crimson cape worn by the Spartans to war, in reference to the color of the ʻapapane. [10]

Bills of Hawaiian honeycreepers by Frederick W. Frohawk, 1893-1900; 23 (lower left) is the Laysan honeycreeper, with the variant spelling H. freethii Hawaiian passerine bills.jpg
Bills of Hawaiian honeycreepers by Frederick W. Frohawk, 1893–1900; 23 (lower left) is the Laysan honeycreeper, with the variant spelling H. freethii

The specific name refers to George D. Freeth, the self-appointed US governor of Laysan, manager of the guano-mining operations there, and amateur naturalist, who had assisted Palmer and Munro. The misspelling of Freeth's name, fraithii, may have been due to a miscommunication or erroneous assumption, and his full name was not mentioned in the description. [2] [11] From 1893 to 1900, Rothschild published a three-part monograph on the birds of Laysan, with further observations about the honeycreeper, which he referred to as the "Laysan honey-eater". Though some related green species had previously also been considered part of the genus Himatione, he agreed with the American zoologist Robert C. L. Perkins that those should be moved to Chlorodrepanis , and restricted Himatione to the red species: the ʻapapane and the Laysan honeycreeper. By this time, Rothschild had realized that he had misspelled Freeth's name, and attempted to emend the spelling to freethi, but also used the spellings fraithi and freethii in sections of the work. [2] [12] The German zoologist Hugo H. Schauinsland used the spelling frethii in 1899. [13]

After the original description, all the spellings of the name were used by different authors, but the original fraithii was only used a few times. [2] [11] The German ornithologist Ernst Hartert used the original spelling in 1919 and also considered the bird a subspecies of ʻapapane, as H. sanguinea fraithii. [6] This classification was followed by most other taxonomists and the trinomial name was used throughout the 20th century. [2] [11] [14] In 1950, the American ornithologist Dean Amadon considered the spelling fraithii to be a lapsus calami ('slip of the pen', or misspelling), and justified using freethii instead, since Rothschild later corrected the name to that. [10] [15] In 2005, the American ornithologist Harold D. Pratt also indicated that the name had been corrected within the original description. [10] In 2011, the American ornithologist Peter Pyle pointed out that Rothschild had not corrected the name until the first part of his monograph was published in 1893, and that he also appears to have realized his emendation was inappropriate, since he reverted to the original spelling fraithi in the third part. Pyle therefore concluded that according to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, the name should not be emended and the original spelling should be reinstated. [11]

In 2015, Pratt, Pyle, and the American ornithologist Reginald E. David formally proposed to the American Ornithologists' Union (AOU) that the Laysan honeycreeper should be split into its own full species again and its specific name changed back to fraithii, based on recent research that supported these conclusions. They also suggested that the bird should be listed in the Checklist of North American Birds under the common English name "Laysan honeycreeper" rather than "Laysan ʻapapane", a name that had by then become popular with some writers, as this would also require a modifier for the name of the ʻapapane. They considered the name "Laysan ʻapapane" a modern retrofitting of Hawaiian names to species whose Hawaiian names are unknown or never had one to begin with, and noted that Native Hawaiians never appear to have visited Laysan Island, which has no traditional Hawaiian name either. These authors stated that they supported the use of Hawaiian neologisms for local use, but thought the AOU should continue designating English names using loan words where appropriate, but not create new ones in other languages. They also found it appropriate that at least one species of Hawaiian honeycreeper would retain the word "honeycreeper" in its common name, for sentimental reasons. [16] In 2015 the AOU implemented these propositions in their checklist. [17] The changes were also adopted by the International Ornithological Committee in their world list of birds the same year. [18]

There are at least 105 known specimens (six of them mounted) of the Laysan honeycreeper in museums across the world, but two specimens appear to have gone missing. Some museums have multiple specimens, including 24 in the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in Honolulu, 20 (including the type specimen) in the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, and 20 in the National Museum of Natural History in Washington. There are also at least two skeletons, three nests, and one egg preserved. The known specimens were collected between 1892 and 1913. [9] [19] [20] The ratio of males to females between adult specimens in museum collections is 1.7:1. [21]

Evolution

Taxidermied Laysan finch (upper left), Laysan honeycreeper (upper middle), and Laysan rail (below), 1903; the latter two are extinct PSM V63 D335 Laysan finch honeywater and wingless rail.png
Taxidermied Laysan finch (upper left), Laysan honeycreeper (upper middle), and Laysan rail (below), 1903; the latter two are extinct

In 1899, Schauinsland considered the Laysan honeycreeper an example of how a new species may arise through isolation and noted its resemblance to the ʻapapane. [13] Perkins stated in 1903 that the Laysan honeycreeper was descended from the ʻapapane colonizing the island, and he divided the Hawaiian honeycreepers into two main groups. [22] Amadon noted in 1950 that although the Laysan finch (Telespiza cantans) and the Laysan honeycreeper spent more time on the ground than their relatives, their power of flight was seemingly not reduced. He pointed out that the length of their wings was rather short, which perhaps indicated a beginning tendency in such a direction. The wing of the finch is shorter, perhaps because it had reached Laysan earlier than the honeycreeper. [15]

In 1976, the American geologist Seymour O. Schlanger and botanist George W. Gillett proposed that because Laysan had been a raised coral island until 18,000 years ago whereafter erosion and tectonic subsidence reduced its height, it could have been a refugium for upland and montane species that had adapted to the drastic changes in habitat. They pointed to the Laysan honeycreeper and Laysan finch as evidence for this, being the only Hawaiian honeycreepers living close to beaches. [23] The American ornithologists Storrs L. Olson and Helen F. James considered the Laysan honeycreeper a distinct species from the ʻapapane in 1982, but without elaboration. [24] [25]

Olson and the American ornithologist Alan C. Ziegler stated in 1995 that while the Laysan honeycreeper was often considered a subspecies of ʻapapane, its skull features indicate it was distinct and probably more primitive, and therefore perhaps a remnant of an earlier evolutionary stage rather than being particularly specialized for the conditions on Laysan. They speculated that if this bird could survive on Laysan, there could also be a niche for a relative on the nearby island of Nihoa. They also argued that Hawaiian honeycreepers are not actually an upland group, but that this perception of them as such comes from them having been wiped out from lowland areas of Hawaii in prehistoric times by human-made habitat destruction, and that many fossils of the group (including of Himatione) have been found in areas just above sea level. They therefore disagreed with the idea that the species found there were a remnant of upland populations or necessarily ancient occupants. [5]

The American biologist Mark J. Rauzon speculated in 2001 that the Laysan honeycreeper could have descended from ʻapapanes that flew there from the rainforests of Kaua‘i, 970 km (600 mi) away, but wondered why there were no descendants on Nihoa, which is closer and has more vegetation. [26] Pratt and the American biologist Thane K. Pratt stated in 2001 that due to its distinct physical features, the Laysan honeycreeper was unquestionably distinct from the ʻapapane following the phylogenetic species concept. They added that potential isolating mechanisms included its distinct song, feeding and nesting behavior, and its very different habitat. They found it very unlikely that the two birds would have been able to interbreed, let alone freely, and considered it likely that future researchers would split them. [25] A 2004 phylogenetic analysis by James based on osteological features found Himatione to group in a clade similar to what Perkins suggested in 1903. Her "clade 11" is depicted in the cladogram below († denotes recent extinctions, ‡ denotes prehistoric): [27]

The `apapane, the closest relative of the Laysan honeycreeper Pezzillo Hosmer `Apapane-2.jpg
The ʻapapane, the closest relative of the Laysan honeycreeper

Vestiaria coccinea (ʻiʻiwi)

Drepanis funerea (black mamo)

Drepanis pacifica (Hawaii mamo)

Himatione sanguinea (ʻapapane)

Himatione freethii (Laysan honeycreeper, now fraithii)

Palmeria dolei (ʻākohekohe)

Ciridops tenax (stout-legged finch)

Ciridops sp. (from Oahu)

Ciridops anna (ʻula-ʻai-hāwane)

The Hawaiian honeycreepers, variously considered to constitute the family Drepanididae (formerly spelled "Drepanidae" or "Drepaniidae", a name that turned out to be nomenclaturally unavailable, because it was preoccupied by a family of moths [15] ), subfamily Drepanidinae, or tribe Drepaninini, were long recognized as constituting a natural group of finches with varying bill-shapes and plumage patterns as a result of adapting to island environments. Their relationships to other finches remained uncertain, and they were often considered a distinct lineage outside the Fringillidae. By the turn of the 21st century, genetic studies had established that drepanids were genetically close to the subfamily Carduelinae; studies from 2011 and 2012 found them nested within that group as the sister group of the genus Carpodacus from Asia (neither study included the Laysan honeycreeper itself). This indicates the Hawaiian honeycreepers originated in Asia, and genetic divergence was estimated to roughly coincide with when the oldest of the Hawaiian Islands formed, about 5.7 million years ago, with further divergence occurring as other islands formed. It was also proposed that Drepanidinae should be treated as a junior synonym of Carduelinae. [28] [29] [30] Since the ʻapapane had been found to be the sister taxon of the ʻākohekohe (Palmeria dolei) by some studies, Pratt suggested in 2014 that their genera Himatione and Palmeria might be merged. [31]

Description

Adult male Laysan honeycreeper (A), adult female (B), juvenile (C), and `apapane (D), by John Gerrard Keulemans, 1893-1900 Himatione fraithii.jpg
Adult male Laysan honeycreeper (A), adult female (B), juvenile (C), and ʻapapane (D), by John Gerrard Keulemans, 1893–1900

The Laysan honeycreeper was a small bird, with published length measurements ranging from 13–15 cm (5–6 in). [7] [20] [32] The wing measured 64–69 mm (2.5–2.7 in), the tail 61 mm (2.4 in), the culmen (upper surface of the beak) 14 mm (0.55 in), and the tarsometatarsus (lower leg bone) was 23 mm (0.9 in). [12] It was bright scarlet vermilion with a faint tint of golden orange on the head, breast and upper abdomen; the rest of its upper parts were orange scarlet. The lower abdomen was dusky gray that faded into brownish white, and the undertail covert feathers were grayish. The wings, tail, bill, and legs were dark brown, and the iris was black with a brown outline. Immature birds were brown, with paler lower parts, and had green edges to their wing-covert feathers. [32] The bill was slender and downturned. [33]

The sexes were alike, though the bill, wings, and tail were slightly shorter in the female. Although Rothschild stated in his 1892 description that the female was paler than the male, the American zoologist Walter K. Fisher indicated in 1903 that such differences may have been age-related instead. Fisher also noted that the illustration of the Laysan honeycreeper published by Rothschild showed the bird as far too pale, giving an inaccurate idea of its color. [7] [34] Rothschild also mentioned in his 1893–1900 work that freshly molted Laysan honeycreepers were a deeper red and not as easy to distinguish from the ʻapapane, while the latter did not fade to as pale a red. [12]

The ʻapapane differs from the Laysan honeycreeper in being blood-red overall, with black wings and tail, whiter undertail covert feathers, and a longer bill. [32] The two also differ in that the Laysan species had a shorter, stouter bill, and in that its primary feathers did not have oblique truncation (in the ʻapapane this truncation produces a "wing note" sounding like vocalization). [10] Amadon suggested in 1950 that the fading and bleaching of Laysan landbirds was in part due to the exposed nature of the island. [15] Olson and Ziegler also suggested in 1995 that the intense sunlight of Lysan had caused the honeycreeper's plumage to fade, accounting for the difference from the ʻapapane, but noted it had been found to be distinct in osteological features. [5] [21] Pratt countered in 2005 that white undertail feathers cannot fade to brown since they lack pigmentation to begin with. [10]

Palmer reported the song of the Laysan honeycreeper as low and "sweet", consisting of several notes. He noted it was usually silent, except during the breeding season, and was in "full song" during January and February. While catching and skinning birds in 1891, Palmer caught a Laysan honeycreeper in his net, which proceeded to sing in his hand; he answered it with a whistle, which it returned, continuing for some minutes without seeming frightened. [12] [19] Munro also described the song as "sweet" with a few notes. [35] The American ornithologist and photographer Donald R. Dickey stated that their "charming song is out of proportion to their size" in 1923. [36]

Habitat

Map of Laysan Island.jpg
Laysan Island 2010 USGS Lidar.JPG
1912 map of Laysan (left) and 2010 aerial photograph

The Laysan honeycreeper was endemic to Laysan, a remote island that has a total land area of 3.6 km2 (1.4 sq mi), and is the largest of the northwestern Hawaiian Islands in the central Pacific Ocean. Laysan is the eroded remnant of a once high island, built up by volcanic activity, perhaps the flattened top of a volcano that formed in the Miocene. The island rises into up to 12 m (40 ft) high crest elevations. Its subsurface substratum is coralline rock, and its topography suggests it was once part of an atoll with a lagoon that occupies about one-fifth of the island's center, and is now almost filled with sand and coral fragments. The island is ringed by sand dunes, but is otherwise well-vegetated. The island's original flora was the most varied of the northwestern Hawaiian islands, but much of it was destroyed by human activities by 1923, leaving near-desert-like conditions and several extinct plant species, though the extent of the vegetation had almost recovered by 1973. [19] [3] [32]

In 1903, Fisher stated that the Laysan honeycreeper was found all over Laysan Island, but was most abundant in the interior among tall grass and low bushes near the open plain that bordered the lagoon, an area where all the landbirds appeared to congregate. This was also the favored nesting area, with its broad patches of the succulent Portulaca that these birds fed from. Munro added that they also frequented grasstops and other plants on the fringes of the lagoon. Their bright, scarlet plumage made them conspicuous as they fluttered among the soft green Chenopodium bushes. [34] [37] [35] This species was the only nectar-feeding finch of the northwestern Hawaiian Islands. [2]

Behavior and ecology

Starr 030202-0066 Capparis sandwichiana.jpg
Starr 030626-0023 Sesuvium portulacastrum.jpg
Maiapilo (left) and ʻākulikuli, some of the flowers that the Laysan honeycreeper fed nectar from

Few naturalists encountered the Laysan honeycreeper and few accounts were left of its life history. It was very active, like the Laysan millerbird (Acrocephalus familiaris familiaris), always present in vegetation around buildings, and though perhaps less trusting than the millerbird, they were reported to sometimes enter buildings to hunt moths and for roosting at night. [33] [19] [38] Palmer stated he generally saw them in pairs. [12] Munro described its flight as "weak and low", and said it could be caught with a hand net, despite being less tame than the other birds. He stated they would gather around houses and drink rainwater from leaks in barrels, indicating that they "missed water" more than the other birds of the island. He speculated they had perhaps not adapted to the meager supply of water there; apart from rain and dew, the only natural moisture was a seep of brackish water. [35]

The Laysan honeycreeper was nectarivorous and insectivorous, and insects were probably a more important part of their diet than nectar in some seasons. Unlike the ʻapapane, it also foraged on the ground. The bird originally fed on nectar from the native flower maiapilo (Capparis sandwichiana), but when that species disappeared, it switched to ʻākulikuli (Sesuvium portulacastrum) and ʻihi (Portulaca lutea). [19] [21] It was also observed visiting nohu (Tribulus cistoides) and pōhuehue (Ipomoea pes-caprae). [21] [35] The Laysan honeycreeper spent the day foraging while walking like pipits after small insects or drinking from flowers with its brush-like tongue. The way it rapidly went from flower to flower and precisely inserted its bill between their petals reminded Schauinsland and Fisher of hummingbirds, though it did so by walking rather than hovering in front of them. [34] [37] [13] [19] The Laysan honeycreeper gathered insects from flowers, such as small, green caterpillars, and were fond of the large, brownish moths called millers (including species of Agrotis and others that have since disappeared [39] ), which were abundant on the island, and were also fed on by other insect-eating birds. The honeycreepers were observed extracting moths from between boards, grasping them with one foot (always the left according to Freeth) while eating the soft parts, leaving the wings and other hard parts. [34] [37] [35]

Reproduction

Laysan honeycreeper nest in a grass tuft, photographed by Walter K. Fisher, 1902 Laysan Honey Eater nest.jpg
Laysan honeycreeper nest in a grass tuft, photographed by Walter K. Fisher, 1902

Fisher noted that the nest of the Laysan honeycreeper was more difficult to find than that of the Laysan millerbird, and found only one, in the middle of a grass tuft about 61 cm (2 ft) above ground. Schauinsland noted it also nested in thick aweoweo (Chenopodium oahuense) shrubs. The nest was made of fine grass (identified as kawelu (Eragrostis variabilis) by Pratt based on Fisher's photograph of the nest [10] ) and rootlets with some dry grass, and its bowl measured about 5.6 cm (2.2 in) across and 4.1 cm (1.6 in) in depth. The nest, which was variously described as loosely or well built, was lined with fine rootlets, petrel feathers, and brown down from albatrosses, but there were no large, white feathers, which made the nest indistinguishable from that of the Laysan millerbird, which built nests in nearby tufts. It differed from that of the millerbird in being tighter in construction and having a shallower cup. The nest was also likened to that of the Laysan finch; the nests of different land birds of the island may have been similar due to the limited selection of building materials. [34] [37] [12] [13]

Little is known about the breeding cycle of the Laysan honeycreeper, and most observers did not record when nests and young were found. [19] [12] Freeth told Palmer that the bird was in "full song" in January and February, when there was also a golden gloss over the red plumage. This indicates that the breeding season was between that time and June, when Palmer saw full-grown young birds. [12] Fisher collected a nest with an egg in mid-May, and the American zoologist William A. Bryan collected an egg on May 10. The American ornithologist Alfred M. Bailey, who visited Laysan in 1912, stated that the clutch size was four or five eggs; sets of three were taken by collectors. [19] The ovate eggs were glossless white, with grayish blotches and spots at the larger end, and reddish brown spots above them, these markings often forming circles. The eggs varied in size, but a typical egg measured 18 by 13.7 mm (0.71 by 0.54 in). The eggs were similar to those of the short-toed treecreeper (Certhia brachydactyla) and the barn swallow (Hirundo rustica), but much less glossy. [34] [37] [12]

Extinction

Henry Palmer among frigate birds on Laysan.jpg
Poached albatross on Laysan Island.jpg
Last Ironwood on Laysan in 1923.jpg
Tanager Expedition camp after sandstorm in 1923.jpg
The collector Henry C. Palmer among frigatebirds on Laysan in the early 1890s, by Frohawk (upper left), hundreds of poached albatross wings piled in an old guano shed in 1911 (upper right), and Dickey's 1923 photographs of the last ironwood to survive destruction by introduced rabbits, crowded with seabirds (lower left), and the Tanager Expedition camp after the sandstorm that killed the last three Laysan honeycreepers (lower right)

The few observations of the Laysan honeycreeper indicate it was not abundant on Laysan to begin with, and only three population estimates were made. Isenbeck already considered the bird uncommon when visiting in 1828 in the first report of the species; Palmer considered it the rarest of the island's birds in 1890, though finding them in fair numbers, and Fisher gave a similar assessment in 1903. [19] The American zoologist Charles C. Nutting stated in 1903 that the species of Laysan were abundant and that there were excellent conditions for collecting and studying birds. He suggested that when guano supplies ran out, Laysan should become a government preserve for bird life, protected from human-made destruction. [40] Laysan was exploited for the guano produced by its large seabird colonies from 1890, but this became unprofitable by 1904. The German superintendent of the guano operation, Max Schlemmer, introduced domestic rabbits, European hares, and guinea pigs to the island in 1903 to start a meat-canning business that would provide food for guano miners and to amuse his children. The venture did not succeed, but the rabbits proceeded to destroy the island's vegetation. [32] [21] [38] [41]

In 1909, the US president Theodore Roosevelt issued an executive order that made several Hawaiian islets and reefs (including Laysan) part of the Hawaiian Islands Reservation. During a 1911 expedition to assess the condition of bird life on Laysan, the American ornithologist Homer R. Dill and Bryan found rabbits everywhere, and foresaw that there would be no vegetation left if drastic measures were not taken. Dill and Bryan described what they saw as "wholesale slaughter": they found thousands of bird skeletons left over by feather hunters, as well as several Laysan honeycreeper skins, but noted the birds were still fearless towards humans. They estimated that 300 Laysan honeycreepers remained and that they and other birds there were "doomed to extermination" if their food supply was not preserved. [38]

Bailey recalled in 1956 that a singing honeycreeper perched on a dead hau (Hibiscus tiliaceus) tree was the first bird to greet him and the Canadian ornithologist George Willett when they visited Laysan in 1912. They were less common than other birds, but were constantly around the building the researchers inhabited. Because of the rapidly disappearing vegetation, the birds were confined to patches of wild tobacco, the few remaining Scaevola plants, and grass tufts. [33] In 1915, the American naval officer William H. Munter reported that the Laysan honeycreeper was fairly common, and that they were judged to number 1000. [42] The American ornithologists Charles A. Ely and Roger B. Clapp pointed out in 1973 that Munter's estimates were perhaps too generous, as he did not consider them numerous the following year. [19]

Male filmed by Dickey in 1923, a few days before the species' extinction

In 1923, the Tanager Expedition, a scientific survey of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands onboard USS Tanager, visited Laysan to eradicate the island's rabbits. By this time, the American ornithologist Alexander Wetmore described the island as a "barren wasteland of sand" that from its appearance might as well be a desert, whereas 20 years earlier it had been a pleasant spot covered in green vegetation. Three Laysan honeycreepers were found to be alive by the expedition members; the birds were scrambling around rocks and guano to pick up small flies. While filming a Laysan finch on April 18, Dickey heard a male honeycreeper, and managed to film it singing on a coral rock, probably the last photographic evidence of this bird, which some authors called the "swan song" of the species. A photograph of this bird that has been published in several sources was probably taken from the footage. A few days later, on April 23, Laysan was hit by a gale spanning three days that caused a strong sandstorm, during which the last three Laysan honeycreepers perished. [36] [33] [26] [43] Their deaths were attributed to the lack of cover during the storm. [21] Some of Dickey's last field notes on the Laysan honeycreeper from April 11, 1923, read as follows:

Reno's report of finding 3 specimens of Himatione alive and thriving today in the tobacco patch SW of the lagoon makes me all the more certain that the species could all have adapted themselves to the changed conditions and gained a livelihood had they only been granted nesting cover to guarantee new recruits to take the place of the older birds as they died off. This tiny Honey Eater was probably the most specialized in its feeding habits of all the endemic land birds on the island. God knows when the last flower bloomed on this barren waste, yet here are at least three individuals of this specialized form persisting as a sort of heritage from the last nest of the species that was built in sufficient cover to survive. But as it seems to me, old age and death now inevitably stalk this childless remnant of a vanishing species. [36] [26]

The destruction of Laysan's vegetation led to the extinction of three out of five of its endemic land birds, and many other bird species have been driven to extinction by human activities across Hawaii (both in prehistoric and modern times). [21] Wetmore reported that the Laysan millerbird had disappeared entirely by his 1923 visit (probably during another sandstorm only months earlier [36] ) and only two Laysan rails (Zapornia palmeri) remained, while about 20 Laysan ducks (Anas laysanensis) had survived. Laysan finches were still singing and hopping about, and the large seabird colonies were not as affected. The rabbits were eradicated from Laysan by the Tanager Expedition during 1923, leading to a remarkable recovery of the vegetation, but too late for the Laysan honeycreeper. [43] [33] [32] [41] Though many searches for the bird were subsequently attempted, such as the Vanderbilt Pacific Equatorial Expedition of 1951, none could be found. [20] While the Laysan rail probably did not survive on the island for long after the storm, it had been introduced to Midway Atoll, but went extinct there too by 1945 because rats (which preyed on eggs, chicks, and perhaps adults) were introduced accidentally during US military construction beginning in 1940. [41]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Finch</span> Family of birds

The true finches are small to medium-sized passerine birds in the family Fringillidae. Finches generally have stout conical bills adapted for eating seeds and nuts and often have colourful plumage. They occupy a great range of habitats where they are usually resident and do not migrate. They have a worldwide native distribution except for Australia and the polar regions. The family Fringillidae contains more than two hundred species divided into fifty genera. It includes the canaries, siskins, redpolls, serins, grosbeaks and euphonias, as well as the morphologically divergent Hawaiian honeycreepers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan duck</span> Species of bird

The Laysan duck, also known as the Laysan teal, is a dabbling duck endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. Fossil evidence reveals that Laysan ducks once lived across the entire archipelago, but today survive only on Laysan Island and two atolls. The duck has several physical and behavioral traits linked to the absence of ground-based predators in its habitat. By 1860, the ducks had disappeared from everywhere except Laysan Island. The introduction of European rabbits by guano miners at the end of the 19th century brought the bird to the brink of extinction in 1912, with twelve surviving individuals. Rabbits were eradicated from the island in 1923 and numbers of Laysan ducks began to rise, reaching 500 by the 1950s. In an effort to ensure the long-term future of this duck, 42 birds were translocated to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge in 2002. These thrived in their new surroundings, and another group were later relocated to Kure Atoll.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan</span> Atoll of Hawaii

Laysan is one of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, located 808 nautical miles northwest of Honolulu. It has one land mass of 1,016 acres (4.11 km2), about 1 by 1+12 miles in size. It is an atoll of sorts, although the land completely surrounds Laysen Lake some 2.4 m (7.9 ft) above sea level that has a salinity approximately three times greater than the ocean. Laysan's Hawaiian name, Kauō, means 'egg'.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan rail</span> Extinct species of bird

The Laysan rail or Laysan crake was a flightless bird endemic to the Northwest Hawaiian Island of Laysan. This small island was and still is an important seabird colony, and sustained a number of endemic species, including the rail. It became extinct due to habitat loss by domestic rabbits, and ultimately World War II.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan finch</span> Species of bird

The Laysan finch is a species of Hawaiian honeycreeper, that is endemic to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. It is one of four remaining finch-billed Hawaiian honeycreepers and is closely related to the smaller Nihoa finch. The Laysan finch is named for Laysan, the island to which it was endemic on its discovery. It was subsequently introduced to a few other atolls, and its historical range included some of the main islands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan albatross</span> Species of bird

The Laysan albatross is a large seabird that ranges across the North Pacific. The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands are home to 99.7% of the population. This small gull-like albatross is the second-most common seabird in the Hawaiian Islands, with an estimated population of 1.18 million birds, and is currently expanding its range to new islands. The Laysan albatross was first described as Diomedea immutabilis by Lionel Walter Rothschild, in 1893, on the basis of a specimen from Laysan Island.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nihoa millerbird</span> Subspecies of bird

The Nihoa millerbird is a subspecies of the millerbird. It gets its name from its preferred food, the Miller moth. The 5-inch (13 cm) long millerbird has dark, sepia-colored feathers, white belly, and dark beak. Its natural geographic range is limited to the tiny island of Nihoa in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, and it is hoped that birds translocated to Laysan will help to ensure the survival of the species. The Nihoa millerbird is one of the two endemic birds remaining on Nihoa, the other being the Nihoa finch.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laysan millerbird</span> Extinct subspecies of bird

The Laysan millerbird was a subspecies of the millerbird, similar in appearance to the remaining subspecies, the Nihoa millerbird. Its dorsal side was brown, and its belly was grayish. Its name derives from its favorite food, several species of moths of the genus Agrotis commonly referred to as "millers".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Millerbird</span> Species of bird

The millerbird is a species of Old World warbler in the family Acrocephalidae endemic to the Hawaiian Islands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carduelinae</span> Subfamily of birds

The cardueline finches are a subfamily, Carduelinae, one of three subfamilies of the finch family Fringillidae, the others being the Fringillinae and the Euphoniinae. The Hawaiian honeycreepers are now included in this subfamily. Except for the Hawaiian honeycreepers which underwent adaptive radiation in Hawaii and have evolved a broad range of diets, cardueline finches are specialised seed eaters, and unlike most passerine birds, they feed their young mostly on seeds, which are regurgitated. Besides this, they differ from the other finches in some minor details of their skull. They are adept at opening seeds and clinging to stems, unlike other granivorous birds, such as sparrows and buntings, which feed mostly on fallen seeds. Some members of this subfamily are further specialised to feed on a particular type of seed, such as cones in the case of crossbills. Carduelines forage in flocks throughout the year, rather than keeping territories, and males defend their females rather than a territory or nest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palila</span> Species of bird

The palila is a critically endangered finch-billed species of Hawaiian honeycreeper. It has a golden-yellow head and breast, with a light belly, gray back, and greenish wings and tail. The bird has a close ecological relationship with the māmane tree, and became endangered due to destruction of the trees and accompanying dry forests. The first specimen of the palila was collected in 1876 at the Greenwell Ranch on the Big Island by Pierre Étienne Théodore Ballieu (1828–1885), who was French consul in Hawai‘i from 1869 to 1878. The type specimen is housed at the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris.

<i>Tanager</i> Expedition A series of five biological surveys of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands

The TanagerExpedition was a series of five biological surveys of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands conducted in partnership between the Bureau of Biological Survey and the Bishop Museum, with the assistance of the United States Navy. Four expeditions occurred from April to August 1923, and a fifth in July 1924. Led by Lieutenant Commander Samuel Wilder King on the minesweeper USS Tanager (AM-5), and Alexander Wetmore directing the team of scientists, the expedition studied the plant animal life, and geology of the central Pacific islands. Noted members of the team include archaeologist Kenneth Emory and herpetologist Chapman Grant.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Black mamo</span> Extinct species of bird

The black mamo, also known as the hoa, is an extinct species of Hawaiian honeycreeper once endemic to the island of Molokai; there is also subfossil evidence of it having lived on Maui.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hawaii mamo</span> Extinct species of bird

The Hawaiʻi mamo is an extinct species of Hawaiian honeycreeper. It was endemic to Hawaii Island. It became extinct due to habitat loss, mosquitoes, introduced predators such as the small Indian mongoose, and overcollecting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lānaʻi hookbill</span> Extinct species of bird

The Lānaʻi hookbill is an extinct species of Hawaiian honeycreeper. It was endemic to the island of Lānaʻi in Hawaiʻi, and was last seen in the southwestern part of the island. George C. Munro collected the only known specimen of this species in 1913, which is housed in the Bernice P. Bishop Museum in Honolulu, and saw the species only twice more, once in 1916 and for a final time in 1918. No other sightings have been reported. They inhabited montane dry forests dominated by ʻakoko and ōpuhe. The Lānaʻi hookbill was monotypic within the genus Dysmorodrepanis and had no known subspecies. Its closest relative is believed to be the ʻōʻū, and some early authors suggested that the Lānaʻi hookbill was merely a deformed ʻōʻū. The Lānaʻi hookbill was a plump, medium-sized bird with greenish olive upperparts and pale whitish yellow underparts. It also had a yellow or white superciliary line and a white chin and throat. The wings also had a distinctive and conspicuous white wing patch. The hookbill's distinguishing characteristic was its heavy, parrotlike bill, which had the mandibles hooking sharply towards each other, leaving a gap between them when the beak was closed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oʻahu ʻamakihi</span> Species of bird

The Oʻahu ʻamakihi is a species of Hawaiian honeycreeper in the family Fringillidae. The male is rich yellow below, sharply contrasted with greenish upper parts. Females are duller and have two prominent wing-bars. It has a total length of approximately 4.5 inches (11 cm). It is endemic to the island of Oʻahu in Hawaiʻi, and is likely the only surviving honeycreeper endemic to the island.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ʻApapane</span> Species of bird

The ʻapapane is a small, crimson species of Hawaiian honeycreeper endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. They are the most abundant and widely distributed honeycreeper and are found on the islands of Hawaiʻi, Maui, Lānaʻi, Kauaʻi, Molokaʻi and Oʻahu.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oʻahu nukupuʻu</span> Extinct species of bird

The Oʻahu nukupuʻu is an extinct species of nukupuʻu, a type of Hawaiian honeycreeper native to Oahu, which was similar to its cousins from the Islands of Kauaʻi and Maui. It is yellowish greyish with a long hooked beak to find insects. This bird is now extinct due to human activity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hawaiian honeycreeper</span> Subfamily of birds

Hawaiian honeycreepers are a group of small birds endemic to Hawaiʻi. They are members of the finch family Fringillidae, closely related to the rosefinches (Carpodacus), but many species have evolved features unlike those present in any other finch. Their great morphological diversity is the result of adaptive radiation in an insular environment. Many have been driven to extinction since the first humans arrived in Hawaii, with extinctions increasing over the last two centuries following European discovery of the islands, with habitat destruction and especially invasive species being the main causes.

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