Science Mice on remote island that eat albatrosses alive sentenced to death by 'bombing,' scientists decree

Mice on remote island that eat albatrosses alive sentenced to death by 'bombing,' scientists decree​


The wandering albatrosses of Marion Island can't defend themselves against an invasive mice population that devours birds alive, but conservationists say a rodenticide 'bomb' could save them.

Screenshot 2024-09-01 at 13-03-11 Mice on remote island that eat albatrosses alive sentenced t...png

A wandering albatross on South Georgia Island in Antarctica (not the island where mice eat albatrosses alive).

Invasive mice are devouring albatrosses alive on a remote island in the Indian Ocean, so conservationists have come up with an explosive solution — "bombing" the mice.

Mice have been wreaking havoc on Marion Island, between South Africa and Antarctica, for decades. Humans accidentally introduced the mice in the 19th century, and the rodents have since developed a taste for wandering albatrosses (Diomedea exulans) and other threatened seabirds.

The Mouse-Free Marion Project, a collaboration between the South African government and BirdLife South Africa, is trying to raise $29 million to drop 660 tons (600 metric tons) of rodenticide-laced pellets onto the island in winter 2027, AFP news agency reported on Saturday (Aug. 24).

The project plans to send a squad of helicopters to drop the pellets. By striking in winter when the mice are most hungry, the conservationists hope to eradicate the entire mouse population of up to 1 million individuals.

"We have to get rid of every last mouse," Mark Anderson, CEO of BirdLife South Africa, told AFP news agency. "If there was a male and female remaining, they could breed and eventually get back to where we are now."

House mice (Mus musculus) first arrived on Marion Island via sealing ships. They began their reign of terror by decimating the island's invertebrates and feasting on seabird eggs. By 2003, the mice were eating seabird chicks alive, and now, a decade later, the mice have figured out they can take on adults, too.

Researchers discovered the carcasses of eight adult wandering albatrosses in April 2023. The birds had deep wounds indicative of mice attacks on their elbows and likely died of secondary infection or starvation. Since then, further reports of adult seabird fatalities show that mouse attacks are escalating.

"Mice just climb onto them and just slowly eat them until they succumb," Anderson said. "We are losing hundreds of thousands of seabirds every year through the mice."

Albatrosses are defenseless against mice because they didn't evolve alongside terrestrial predators. They spend most of their lives at sea, and nesting sites like Marion Island are so isolated that mice and other non-marine mammals couldn't reach them until humans came along. Because the birds evolved to live in an environment where they didn't encounter any terrestrial predators, they don't possess any mechanisms by which they might defend themselves.

A previous attempt to control Marion Island's invasive mice population with cats had dire consequences. Researchers took five cats to the island's meteorological station in 1948, but the offspring of these cats went feral and hunted seabirds as well as mice.

The feral cats bred and spread across the island until they were killing an estimated 455,000 birds a year in the 1970s. Researchers successfully eradicated the cats in 1991.

The rodenticide at the heart of the new eradication strategy, in contrast, should only kill mice because it doesn't affect Marion Island's native invertebrates and the seabirds usually feed at sea.

Source: Live Science

Archive
 
Should we intervene here...?

The birds honestly seem to be pretty chill about being eaten alive. I mean you can walk up and just take hatchlings and they dont do anything even chickens out up more of a protest.
Occasionally humans introduce invasive species into a place where they do not belong:

Mice into Marion Island;
Common Carp into the Great Lakes;
Niggers into Ohio;
Possums into New Zealand.

As stewards of this Earth, it is our responsibility to correct our mistakes.
 
Last edited:
If this is the island I'm thinking of don't look up footage of these "mice" unless you want to know viscerally why elephants fear them.


No, that shit won't work here. They're also fucking huge and dig through their sternums to get at their heart tissue.
I clicked the link about the actual mouse attacks, it said they just give them bites and the birds die later?
 
  • Optimistic
Reactions: LurkTrawl
Should we intervene here...?

The birds honestly seem to be pretty chill about being eaten alive. I mean you can walk up and just take hatchlings and they dont do anything even chickens out up more of a protest.

I clicked the link about the actual mouse attacks, it said they just give them bites and the birds die later?
As I posted earlier, it's the chicks that are being eaten, and the adults are usually out in the open ocean miles and miles away hunting for fish to feed said chicks.
There isn't much of a fight you can put up when you have no claws like a chicken, and sure, you have a large beak, but that's useless when the mouse is biting at your neck and head that a beak can't reach. You can shake and roll around, but I imagin that just makes the mice bite harder. And being chicks, they can't leave the nest area very far or will risk starvation, since in the vast majority of birds, if a chick leaves the nest too far, the parents will not go looking for it, it's a waste of resources to do so. Plus they can't fly yet either.
If they manage to remove the mice, it still leaves them open to death from infection or even blood loss depending on the bite location and how deep it was (birds do not have the best immune systems when compared to a reptile or a mammal).
 
Welp, I'm being eaten alive. I feel like I should do something but years of evolution have left me completely unprepared for terrestrial predators. I've got a beak but it's only for eating fish. These mice have legs! How the fuck do I fight something with legs? Fuck! What else, what else? Oh yeah, I have wings. I could fly somewhere where there aren't brain eating mice. But my home is here! I'm not going to just find a new home. I was here first! Oh well. Guess I'll just sit here and let the mice eat through my skull. Goddamnit evolution!
Sounds like an allegory of modern times. The albatross are westerners and the rats are pakis and niggers.
Occasionally humans introduce invasive species into a place where they not belong:

Mice into Marion Island;
Common Carp into the Great Lakes;
Niggers into Ohio;
Possums into New Zealand.

As stewards of this Earth, it is our responsibility to correct our mistakes.
Don't forget rabbits to australia, where the solution was to give them all rabbit aids, except they didn't die and became disease-vector bombs. GG.

Why not just release a shit load of Owls onto the Island? They live in cold places and from my experience, love eating mice, and then shitting them all over my driveway.
 
Uhhhhhhhh they already tried with cats, didn't work...
Cats were always a horrible idea considering they're expert bird murderers and pretty much untrainable for specific targets.

I say send in a pack of trained ratting dogs. They can actually be taught that attacking birds is not allowed and could probably clear the island of rodents in short order.

Ratting-with-terriers.-Cornwall-ratting.jpg
 
They haven't been used on a project like this yet because of the fear that they could escape and devastate the world mouse population.
Would that really be such a bad thing? It's humanity's fault they're fucking everywhere. They're not a crucial part of any ecosystem. Any number of the small rodents they outcompete right now (voles, chipmunks, lemmings, etc.) could take over any niche they occupy.

We are talking about shit-eating, disease-ridden, cannibalistic vermin that bring nothing but famine, pestilence, and death with them wherever they go. Let the house mouse go the way of smallpox.
Why not just release a shit load of Owls onto the Island? They live in cold places and from my experience, love eating mice, and then shitting them all over my driveway.
They are predatory birds. I don't think they'd get along too well with the nesting albatrosses either.
 
I didn't know albatross were that dumb or apathetic toward life.
I had seen these videos were scientists would walk up and grab their hatchlings with very little effort.
Albatrosses are fucking retarded even by bird standards. Sitting there letting mice eat them isn't the only dumb thing they do. They also gorge themselves on garbage - as in actual garbage consisting of plastic, styrofoam, and other inedible compounds - until their stomach is so full they can't eat actual food any more. Then they starve to death. But not before bringing plastic home and feeding it to their chicks first, killing them too.

They're basically the pandas of birds. Too stupid to live. To drive this point home, there are 22 species of albatross. Only one of them isn't threatened or near threatened.
 
I didn't know albatross were that dumb or apathetic toward life.
I had seen these videos were scientists would walk up and grab their hatchlings with very little effort.
Alternative solution with these birds. Raise them like you would chickens. If people knew the Dodo would go out, they would have started farming the bastards and wouldn't have gotten extinct.
 
Albatross are ridiculously docile.
Train kea to eat mice
Kea are so pretty and fun, but utter hooligans. They ate my windscreen wiper blades.

The ratting dogs seems like the best idea along with poison bait and bait contaminated with long acting contraceptives. They’ve rid plenty of islands of rodent/mustelid predators in NZ, DOC are probably the guys to ask.
 
If they manage to remove the mice, it still leaves them open to death from infection or even blood loss depending on the bite location and how deep it was (birds do not have the best immune systems when compared to a reptile or a mammal).
I would also like to add, most birds blood does not clot up easily like other animals or humans. Bleeding out is very likely to be what kills a bird if they suffer an injury that causes them to start bleeding.
 
I support anything that results in Total Mouse Death on this island, fuck mice, they are awful little bastards, get into everything and are just a pain in the ass to deal with. My chickens like to spread their food everywhere which attracts them out to the chicken pen but thankfully the chickens usually just eat the mice too if they catch them.
 
Back