But the patches of trees that do remain, persevering
in the face of extreme environmental change and adversity, are some of the richest
on the entire island chain and are home to many species of native and
endangered birds. From the scarlet I’iwi, to the incredible Akiapola'au with its highly specialized beak, numerous endemic Hawaiian honeycreepers have found refuge in
the high elevation forests of Hakalau. Curiously enough, while the daily cold
mist and rain and the nightly frost and freezing temperatures might be a
tourist’s worst nightmare, elevation is actually a honeycreeper’s best friend.
Ensconced safely at 6,000 feet above sea level, these surviving species have
reached the end of a remarkable elevational migration which took them from the
warm lowland forests to trees at the base of the highest volcano in the state.
The
story of the downfall of the Hawaiian honeycreepers and the dramatic range
shift of the few surviving species begins all the way back in the 19th
century. At this time, Europeans were arriving en masse to the islands and
bringing with them a veritable animal army. Domesticated and livestock animals
like cows, pigs, sheep, and dogs were brought across the ocean intentionally,
in order to enrich the lives and diets of European settlers. And with these
animals, came unintentional immigrants as well: rats and mice and much smaller
creatures, the diseases and bacterium that followed their hosts over the waves.
From
the Galapagos Islands to the Hawaiian chain, the story of endemic island
wildlife world-wide is largely the same. Evolved from founding species that
showed up, storm-blow, wave-washed, and confused, island species developed in
relative isolation from the rest of the world for thousands of years. If something
didn’t exist on their island, they had no experience interacting with it. This
ultimately meant that they fell easy prey to introduced predators like cats,
and humans, and the weasel-like mongoose. For an example, consider the Great
Auk, a now extinct Icelandic bird which remained fearless of humans even as thousands
were slaughtered for food in plain view of the rest of the flock. This
evolutionary naivety also includes lacking defenses against common diseases that
mainland species have been combating and resisting for thousands of years.
Hawaiian honeycreepers are no exception to this general trend. When Europeans
brought fowl species infected with a disease causing organism called Plasmodium reticulum to the islands in
the 19th century, it sealed the fate of many Hawaiian birds.
The
survivors are those that have adapted behaviorally to the presence of the
protist and its vector species the mosquito. Abandoning the remaining lowland
forests, species like the endangered ‘Akepa, the “I’iwi, and the ‘Amakihi, were
chased up an elevational gradient until they finally reached forests that were
too cold for the mosquitoes to successfully inhabit. Up here, above the clouds
in Hakalau, they have finally found some breathing room.
Or so we believe. The truth is,
not much is known about how native honeycreepers use this high-elevation
habitat. Their home ranges, how far they travel, where they forage and nest, are
largely unknown. It might seem a little odd: after all, these are brightly
colored birds and their songs fill the forest canopy with continual noise. But
they are small, spend most of their time high in the treetops, and are
incredibly active making them difficult to track. This means that it’s often
difficult to gauge not what parts of the surviving forest are of most use to
these birds, and also how much time they spend in newly re-forested sections of
the reserve.
While this new forest looks promising
from a human-perspective (Trees? Check. Vegetation?
Check) evaluating how effective this reforestation really is, understanding if
these new tracts of koa are forming usable habitat for native species, requires
one to follow the birds. In addition to setting up net lines to catch, band,
and count individual honeycreepers, scientists at Hakalau have experimented
with the delicate art of attaching tiny radio transmitter backpacks to
individuals. Worn like a mini-harness, these miniscule transmitters bleep out
the location of their owners as the birds travel through the landscape. The
signal is picked up by special receivers, with each individual bird on its own
frequency, and with enough dedication and ample luck, one is able to track the
honeycreepers as they navigate through the reserve. By calculating where they
spend the majority of their time and how often they choose to inhabit the
tracts of new koa, scientists are hoping to better quantify the success of the
reforestation effort.
In 2011, I spent a month in
Hakalau working for the USGS, catching and tracking honeycreepers through the
rainforest. There is nothing like holding the receiver and antennae in one
hand, and trying not to slip and slide down stream banks, into giant tree
ferns, or off elevated forest ridges to give one a healthy respect for just how
far and effortlessly these birds travel over such thick terrain. Occasionally,
I would look up and see them, darting high above me in flashes of wings and
bright color. Their songs made the beep
of my radio seem tinny and subdued. Every so often they would alight when they
thought you weren’t looking, and would sit on the wet branch of a Koa or ‘Ohia tree,
fluffing up their vivid plumage and blinking their eyes against the light rain
that came streaming down through the canopy. Inadvertently we have chased these
remarkable birds here, to their last cloud-shrouded bastion, and we are now
following them through it, chasing their vibrant afterimages through the dense
trees, waiting and watching to see where they will go next.