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

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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.

They are predatory birds. I don't think they'd get along too well with the nesting albatrosses either.
Viruses mutate all the time. Releasing a virus that targets the common rodent might end in devastating many species related and unrelated.
 
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.
Another animal that's just too stupid to live is the koala. We should just let that entire species of chlamydia-infested morons die off.
 
I think it's interesting that among birds you can find both some of the dumbest animals on the planet (such as these albatrosses or pigeons, turkeys, etc.) and some of the smartest (birds of prey are pretty smart and iirc corvids and certain species of parrot have primate level intelligence).
 
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My grandmother had an island. Nothing to boast of. You could walk around it in an hour, but still it was, it was a paradise for us. One summer, we went for a visit and discovered the place had been infested with rats. They’d come on a fishing boat and gorged themselves on coconut. So how do you get rats off an island? Hmm? My grandmother showed me. We buried an oil drum and hinged the lid. Then we wired coconut to the lid as bait and the rats would come for the coconut and… they would fall into the drum. And after a month, you have trapped all the rats, but what do you do then? Throw the drum into the ocean? Burn it? No. You just leave it and they begin to get hungry. And one by one… they start eating each other until there are only two left. The two survivors. And then what? Do you kill them? No. You take them and release them into the trees, but now they don’t eat coconut anymore. Now, they only eat rat.
 
Why didn't they steralize the cats or only brought male cats?
For some fucking researchers you'd think they'd have the foresight to not introduce another invasive species.
The science heyday of the like 1800s is basically introducing invasive species to try to take care of previous invasive species. It’s literally the little old woman who swallowed a fly.
 
Do they not feel the pain and flee?

Idk. I’m rural and we can always tell when a rabbit or a gopher or whatever is sick because they lose their natural prey-motivated fear of other animals. They just stay put when the humans or the dogs get close.

Is there some kind of avian illness that could be affecting these birds, making them less likely to simply flap flap away from the murder mice?
These birds are extremely dumb, they have no capacity to recognize their chicks if they step out of the nest.
 
You should never shoot an albatross if you're working as a sailor. Bad things happen. But we learned that one the hard way:
 
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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.
I love chickens
 
I think it's interesting that among birds you can find both some of the dumbest animals on the planet (such as these albatrosses or pigeons, turkeys, etc.) and some of the smartest (birds of prey are pretty smart and iirc corvids and certain species of parrot.
Pigeons are actually smarter than you would think, they can remember faces and individual people, details of landmarks around them, have a great memory capacity for a bird, and they can problem solve. Not to the level of a corvid or a parrot, but still higher than a lot of humans could (especially from certain demographics).
 
Reminds me of this infamous episode:
In 1961, a bizarre infestation of “Black Widow” spiders occurred on Fundão Island, in Rio de Janeiro.

Some fishermen were bitten and there were deaths. With the animals threatening the 120 children admitted to the Childcare Institute on the island, the FAB was asked for help.

It was discovered that a small island near the Childcare Institute was the epicenter of the infestation. On the so-called “Black Widow Island”, the spiders’ “HQ”, a true war operation was set up.

The FAB installed 100 oil and gasoline drums on the island as targets for gelatinous Napalm bombs that were to be dropped by a Gloster Meteor F-8 fighter jet of the Brazilian Air Force.

However, on the day of the attack (July 26, 1961) at 3:55 p.m., the wind deflected the bombs, which did not reach their target.

As early as 1962, there were reports in newspapers of the time about spider attacks in the region and warnings on local beaches about the danger of poisonous spiders.


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I think it's interesting that among birds you can find both some of the dumbest animals on the planet (such as these albatrosses or pigeons, turkeys, etc.) and some of the smartest (birds of prey are pretty smart and iirc corvids and certain species of parrot have primate level intelligence).
Sometime I need to do some autistic digging to see if there are any historical records on crow and raven intelligence going way back, I'm interested to know if they're evolving alongside us or if they've always had an edge on other birds.
I read a very interesting book on ravens which had accounts of ravens in Alaska tipping their wings while flying above a herd of prey animals to indicate the herds presence to hunters and then the hunters leave scraps for the ravens, and this behavior apparently goes beyond cooperation with humans and they have been observed following packs of wolves on the hunt as well. Crows have been observed practicing deceit and engaging in deliberate "fun" which are indicators of intelligence in animals.

I've met an African grey with an uncanny ability to read the room and respond to social cues that surprised me. Little things like exclaiming "whew!" when someone would come in and take off their shoes and sit down, or calling for the dog and saying "goodnight" when someone was saying bye. My chickens are pretty stupid tbh and if I wasn't around to take care of them they would quickly die, but I love the benefit of eggs.
 
I declare exterminatus on the african island of Marion. I hereby sign the death warrant of an entire island and consign a thousand rodents to oblivion. May environmental justice account in all balance. The Conservationist protects.
 
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