Young brown pelicans in their nest on Raccoon Island, a Gulf of Mexico barrier island that is a nesting ground for birds in Chauvin, La.

Young brown pelicans in their nest on Raccoon Island, a Gulf of Mexico barrier island that is a nesting ground for birds in Chauvin, La. Such barrier islands with nesting colonies of brown pelicans are vanishing, disappearing under water as a result of climate change.

Gerald Herbert / AP

Climate change, vanishing islands in Louisiana threaten brown pelicans

Scientists estimate Louisiana loses one football field’s worth of ground every 60 to 90 minutes. “We’re on the front lines of climate change,” one ecologist says.

CHAUVIN, La. — Sliding off the side of her small boat, seabird biologist Bonnie Slaton wades through waist-high water as brown pelicans soar overhead until she reaches the shores of Raccoon Island.

During seabird breeding season, this place is a raucous symphony of noise and motion — and one of the few remaining refuges for pelicans, one of the most iconic birds found in the United States.

The crescent-shaped island is the final sliver of land separating Louisiana from the Gulf of Mexico — a natural speed bump offering protection against hurricanes and other storms rolling in from the sea. An hour’s boat ride from the mainland, the barrier island’s remoteness allows birds to nest on mangroves and sandy beaches safely away from most predators.

A dozen years ago, there were around 15 low-lying islands with nesting colonies of Louisiana’s state bird. Today, only about six islands in southeastern Louisiana harbor brown pelican nests — the rest have disappeared underwater.

“Louisiana is rapidly losing land,” says Slaton, a researcher at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. “Subsidence and sea level rise are a double whammy.”

The vanishing islands threaten one of the last century’s most celebrated conservation success stories — the decades-long effort to bring the pelicans back from the edge of extinction.

The same forces swallowing up these coastal islands also are causing southern Louisiana’s saltwater marshes to disappear faster than anywhere else in the country. Scientists estimate Louisiana loses one football field’s worth of ground every 60 to 90 minutes.

“We’re on the front lines of climate change. It’s all happening here,” University of Louisiana at Lafayette ecologist Jimmy Nelson says.

Young brown pelicans sit in their nest as terns fly overhead on Raccoon Island.

Young brown pelicans sit in their nest as terns fly overhead on Raccoon Island.

Gerald Herbert / AP

Visiting a seabird colony is like entering the hustle and bustle of a busy city, with neighborhoods of birds loosely grouped by species — pelicans, terns, egrets, spoonbills and gulls, all ferrying meals to their chicks.

As Slaton and two other biologists walk along Raccoon Island’s shoreline, the birds alight. The swirling, swooping cacophony of feathered life announces the intruders.

As Slaton treks sand dunes to replace batteries and memory cards for 10 trail cameras on poles, her T-shirt becomes speckled in white bird droppings.

The motion-activated cameras are set up to observe pelican nests in varied habitats. Some of the circular nests of smooth cordgrass are built atop mangrove stands, others on grassy hillocks.

Marine biologist Bonnie Slaton check a field camera with research assistant Tyler Bowen on Raccoon Island. It’s still a decent breeding habitat as long as the soil holds and plants remain above water. But Slaton says, “In five or 10 years, it may or may not be here. It’s that rapid.”

Marine biologist Bonnie Slaton check a field camera with research assistant Tyler Bowen on Raccoon Island. It’s still a decent breeding habitat as long as the soil holds and plants remain above water. But Slaton says, “In five or 10 years, it may or may not be here. It’s that rapid.”

Gerald Herbert / AP

The early birds snatch up mangrove penthouses, where nests have a better chance of surviving storms. “The late nesters are on the ground, which is riskier,” Slaton says.

Based on camera data, the main threat in recent years has been flooding — which can wash away entire nests, as happened in April 2021.

Passing one ground nest, Slaton bends to watch as two tiny, featherless gray-and-pink pelican chicks squirm, eyes still closed. She figures they hatched overnight or earlier that day.

Within a week, chicks are covered in downy white and gray feathers. When parents are off the nest, the older chicks stand guard, swaying and hissing at perceived threats.

Watching a seabird colony reveals at once the promise and fragility of new life. Then, suddenly, the biologists are wiping white dribbles from their foreheads again. They don’t resent the aerial assaults. After all, the copious bird droppings act as natural fertilizer that helps shrubs and grass grow from the island’s sand and stones. Their roots slow erosion.

Without seabirds, the land would disappear much faster.

Brown pelicans fly along the shore of Raccoon Island.

Brown pelicans fly along the shore of Raccoon Island.

Gerald Herbert / AP

When Mike Carloss was a child in Louisiana in the 1960s, he never saw brown pelicans.

In 1970, the big coastal birds were among the first species declared endangered in the United States. Like bald eagles, their populations had been decimated by widespread DDT pesticide use, which thinned eggshells and prevented healthy chicks from hatching.

Pelicans were completely gone from Louisiana, where their likeness remained only on the state flag. But a long-running effort to bring them back led to one of the country’s most inspiring comebacks.

One location was Raccoon Island, where Carloss, then a teenage field assistant for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, remembers tossing fish from the beach to feed chicks.

“I babysat these young pelicans out on a remote island,” he says. “Somebody had to hand-feed them essentially.”

As a state wildlife biologist for more than two decades, Carloss later oversaw restoration projects on the island. But now he fears that, if islands keep disappearing, “we would be back to the days of the ‘60s and not because of poisoning.”

Protecting what’s left depends on continuous human intervention.

Today, one side of Raccoon Island is ringed by granite breakwaters that divert tides. Sand has been pumped in to refill small lagoons beginning to form.

A brown pelican sits on pilings with seagulls in marshland in Chauvin, La.

A brown pelican sits on pilings with seagulls in marshland in Chauvin, La.

Gerald Herbert / AP

Over the course of thousands of years, most barrier islands rise and fall. Unlike volcanic islands, there is no bedrock, only layers of silt washed down the Mississippi delta.

Barrier islands, as environmental historian Jack Davis once wrote, “are impermanent, precarious places, at the mercy of wind and washing water — making, shaping and destroying them.”

But rising seas and increased storm frequency and intensity linked to climate change accelerate the pace. And the islands have been starved of new sediment from the Mississippi River because its course has been controlled since the 1940s with levees to prevent flooding and aid shipping.

“That stops sediment from reaching areas that are fast sinking,” says Jaap Nienhuis, who studies erosion at Utrecht University in the Netherlands and previously conducted research in Louisiana. “Coastal Louisiana is losing land at perhaps the highest rate in the world.”

Nesting pelicans as seen from the air on Raccoon Island.

Nesting pelicans as seen from the air on Raccoon Island.

Gerald Herbert / AP

Every few years, government agencies undertake work to restore and maintain some of the barrier islands, an unending labor. The money comes, for now, from a legal settlement after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill that killed hundreds of thousands of marine animals.

But it won’t last forever — and many sinking islands aren’t restored at all.

On another day, the biologists steer their aluminum boat past an unrestored island called Philo Brice. Mangroves grow on low inundated land, and pelicans nest in the upper branches.

It’s still a decent breeding habitat as long as the soil holds and plants remain above water.

“In five or 10 years, it may or may not be here,” Slaton says. “It’s that rapid.”

Flying in a small plane at 500 feet, low enough to see the heads of pelicans poking from mangroves, the difference between Raccoon Island and unrestored Philo Brice is stark: One is solid land, the other like soft bread dissolving in a soup of blue.

When biologist Juita Martinez conducted research in coastal Louisiana between 2018 and 2021, she found the number of pelicans on another unrestored and flooded island, Felicity, dropped from 500 to about 20.

“In the last decade or two, we’ve lost so many pelican nesting sites,” she says.

Brown pelicans can live more than 20 years, and in long-lived seabirds the impact of breeding troubles takes time to become clear. For now, pelicans are still common in coastal Louisiana, and their likenesses are everywhere. At the Bayou Boogaloo music and arts fair, pelican artwork often sells out first, says New Orleans painter Patrick Henry, standing with his brightly colored bird portraits.

The brown pelican “is a symbol of Louisiana, just like the eagle is a symbol of America,” says Rue McNeil, executive director of the Northlake Nature Center in Mandeville, Louisiana. “It was put on the state flag because that particular bird represents a lot of strength.”

On a recent afternoon, Theresa Dardar calls out to neighbors as she and her husband Donald take their boat down the Pointe-au-Chien Bayou in southeastern Louisiana.

“This bayou, I used to ride down it with my grandfather,” Dardar says. “I could reach out and pull the grass on the land on either side of the boat. But look how wide the water is now — all that land is gone.”

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