The rookery – Part 3

Humans seem inclined to lens the world through vision focused on self.  Thus becomes the agony of aloneness, separation from the world that nurtures us despite our intent to destroy it and all it births.  Too long have people scampered about in hurried endeavors to own, to acquire, to master.  And in response to our anthropocentric ways, too many lives have been brushed from the face of the planet that will never again be seen.

Long before sunrise on July 23, 1998, the city of Carrollton, Texas, began work on what it dubbed “Operation Remove Excrement.”  Huge industrial lights invaded the darkness at 4:00 AM and a motte at the city’s Josey Ranch Park came to life with the sound of bulldozers.  By 4:30 AM as resident Jack Laivins drove to work, the sky above the trees roiled with billowing smoke.  Upon closer inspection, though, he realized the smoke was actually thousands of heron and egret adults circling in the night sky above the municipal park.  Carrollton had decided to raze an active bird rookery while parents and offspring remained in the nests.

The official cost was staggering: several hundred birds killed, many hundreds more injured, thousands forced to abandon the area—most likewise abandoning their young, and an entire breeding territory decimated at the height of migratory bird nesting.  The city’s reason?  They had received “numerous complaints” about the noise and odor.  The town claimed it studied the area for several months, took its time in planning the action, and needed no permission to remove inconvenient birds. 

Acting lawfully, responsibly and humanely explains why the devastation took place during the overnight hours such that it would be complete before daybreak.  Unfortunately for Carrollton, it could never be completed before citizens noticed the dead bodies, the orphaned chicks, the wounded animals left in piles of rubble, and the panicked adults searching desperately for their children.  Three days later, hungry and parched birds were still being pulled from twisted and crushed debris, many with broken wings or legs, many more with neck or spine injuries, and some with limbs nearly severed.

The Josey Ranch Park rests on land donated by Don Josey, father of Melissa Gribble, a federally licensed wildlife rehabilitator.  The city’s sense of irony was fully intact.  They paid nearly $200,000 in rehabilitation costs and federal fines—an amount profoundly lacking under the circumstances.  And the public backlash reached international proportions as news of the incident spread.

The horror of Carrollton’s actions represents the worst of human society, a place where wildlife already pushed from most of its native habitat must face yet another harrowing obstacle course: trying to survive in those tiny plots of land still available whilst simultaneously hoping to go unnoticed by those who see such things as nuisances, inconveniences to be wiped from the planet’s surface.

Now leap forward to February 2009 at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center rookery in Dallas.

One-year-old little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) nesting for the first time as it transitions from the juvenile’s all-white plumage to the adult’s all-dark plumage (2009_05_17_019779)

After great egrets began arriving and building nests, maintenance staff decided to “landscape” around the tree grove that hosts a surprisingly diverse group of birds.  The school called it brush clearing.  Photos of the aftermath showed nests on the ground; saplings, snags and small trees felled; significant understory clearing; the pond wholly exposed to sunshine and human activity; and a lot of plant removal beneath and inside the drip line where birds actively roost.  Images also captured egrets wandering through a stark landscape that once hid them from prying eyes and predators.

Recently fledged male house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) perched in a tree (2009_05_17_019810)

“They didn’t know the birds were there.”  Thus constitutes the brevity of the university’s response when asked about the incident.  Given the birds fly in and out of the trees on wings that span nearly six feet/two meters, and they make a great deal of noise during the breeding and nesting season, they could hardly go unnoticed.  After all, even the children at the daycare center across the street already had noticed the birds, small kids intoxicated by the exotic magic of the area where flying giants and colorful creatures spend many months from late winter through early autumn—and where these mystical beings have done so for at least half a century.

Male common grackle (Quiscalus quiscula) collecting insects for his chicks (2009_06_20_023983)

Many feared this represented a precursor to a Carrollton-like assault on the rookery.  Vocal citizens and organizations spoke up and the local media responded.  The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department got involved.  Yet I spent an insightful morning speaking to UT Southwestern administrators and walked away with an impression not of imminent doom but of palpable fear of bad press coupled with a sense of obligation and promise.

Little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) chicks still in the nest (2009_06_13_023108)

“It’s about the birds, not the people.”  No other statement from university officials struck me like that  one.  The UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas has “officially” hosted the rookery on campus grounds since at least 1966.  Circumstantial evidence suggests the rookery existed as far back as 1959 and anecdotal evidence indicates herons and egrets have nested in the area since at least 1938.  Regardless of the exact date, fifty years of the school’s own records stand as significant tribute to the longevity of this urban wildlife haven.

Recently fledged black-crowned night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax) perched in a tree (2009_06_20_023813)

Dr. Charles Sprague, the first president of the university, asked that the birds be allowed to use the area for as long as they chose to nest there, essentially requesting of UT Southwestern that they respect and protect the site ad infinitum.  The school agreed.  Perhaps their readiness to accept that challenge stemmed from “knowledgeable sources” who claimed the rookery would self-destruct within ten years due to the volume of guano and the impact it would have on soil acidity and flora.  Contrary to that prediction, susceptible plants died while a host of other plants thrived—and the rookery goes on.

Great egret (Ardea alba) chick peering down from the nest(2009_06_13_023179)

An ongoing grassroots effort hopes to convince the UT System Board of Regents and the Texas Legislature to grant official recognition and protection to the rookery.  UT Southwestern appears inclined to host the birds, even if as an act of tolerance only, and as state property and a state organization the campus cannot blindly destroy the area without putting Texas in the position of having wiped out a long-lived nesting site for protected birds.

Nevertheless, many agree more can and should be done, especially in light of the greatest threat the birds now face, a relentless and insidious foe whose unimaginable power is matched only by heartlessness.  This adversary is responsible for the death of a great many birds this year, and the villain has caused the failure and abandonment of more nests in the rookery than has ever been seen before.  Even nests with chicks have been left to suffer under the skeletal hand of this monster.  The attacker remains bent on destroying what little of nature remains unscathed by the spread of civilization.

The enemy is at the gates.  You will come face to face with the ghoul in the final part of this series.

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Photos:

[1] One-year-old little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) nesting for the first time as it transitions from the juvenile’s all-white plumage to the adult’s all-dark plumage

[2] Recently fledged male house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus)

[3] Male common grackle (Quiscalus quiscula) collecting insects for his chicks

[4] Little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) chicks still in the nest

[5] Recently fledged black-crowned night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax)

[6] Great egret (Ardea alba) chick peering down from the nest

[cross-posted to The Clade]

Acting on behalf of the rookery

While working on my series about the rookery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, I’ve grown quite enamored of the place.  I’ve also grown concerned for its welfare.  Not to say I think UT will pull a Carrollton and bulldoze it in the middle of the night while nesting birds lie sleeping with their chicks…

But I do think it needs official protection, official recognition.  More of my reasoning will become clear as I get the final two pieces of the rookery series completed and posted.  Before then, however, here’s some information I just posted on the Audubon Dallas forums.

I’m cross-posting it here for the same reason I posted it there.

— — — — — — — — — —

I’m bringing back this thread from the past to ask for your collective help.

The UTSWMC rookery, although not in imminent danger, needs official recognition and protection to ensure it remains a safe haven for the thousands of birds who nest there annually.  Because the UTSWMC answers to the UT System’s Board of Regents and the Board of Regents answers to the state legislature, it’s time to push both to acknowledge and safeguard the rookery.

So here’s how you can help.

(1) Send an e-mail to the Board of Regents. Here are the e-mail addresses to send to:
bor@utsystem.edu (for the whole Board)
uts-feedback@utsystem.edu (for UT System feedback)
tbrown@utsystem.edu (for Vice Chancellor Tonya Moten Brown who’s in charge of facilities management)
chancellor@utsystem.edu (for Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa who’s the UT System CEO)

(2) If you live in Texas, contact your state senators and representatives.  Go to Who Represents Me? to find out who they are and to access contact pages for them (some don’t have contact pages, so you might have to write a real letter).

(3) Whether or not you live in Texas, contact the following people.
Senator Judith Zaffirini, Chair of the Higher Education Committee (to whom the Board of Regents answers): Contact form
Representative Allan Ritter, Chair of the Natural Resources Committee: Contact form
Representative Dennis Bonnen, Chair of the Land & Resource Management Committee: Contact form

Finally, here’s a copy of the e-mail I sent.  You’re welcome to copy it verbatim, modify it to fit your personal taste, use it for ideas, or ignore it entirely.

Chancellors Cigarroa and Brown, and other concerned parties:

It behooves me to write on behalf of the colonial-nesting wading birds and other avian inhabitants of the Dallas-based UT Southwestern Medical Center campus in North Texas.

As you no doubt already know, habitat loss has reduced native nesting areas in Texas to a fraction of what they once were for species such as the great egret, black-crowned night-heron, cattle egret, little blue heron, tricolored heron, white ibis and snowy egret. In addition to a lack of available space, recent scientific studies clearly show climate change is forcing coastal species such as these to move further north; a 2007 study from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University showed ongoing drought and higher temperatures in Texas had already begun, and in response the Gulf ecosystem can no longer support the diversity of life it once did.

The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas has officially hosted a thriving rookery (nesting area for many species) for at least half a century, the space playing host to thousands of nests and many thousands of birds–all within a 3.5 acre motte. Circumstantial and anecdotal evidence indicate the nesting area has been used for almost three-quarters of a century. More than 70 bird species were identified during the most recent census of inhabitants.

While the UT Southwestern administration has maintained the rookery in response to a promise made to Dr. Charles Sprague with regards to protecting and respecting the site, it seems prudent now to officially acknowledge this urban marvel and act to protect it so long as the birds choose to nest there.

I am writing to ask for your support in declaring the UT Southwestern Medical Center rookery a protected nature sanctuary, including the Memorial Garden. As such, it should receive official recognition as a safe harbor for the multitude of birds who utilize it, and it should be safeguarded for future generations of people and birds alike. Under the guise of the UT System’s “special responsibility” to manage the land responsibly, ensuring the safety of the rookery falls well within that mandate.

This same proposal is being presented to the Legislature of the State of Texas as means to protect our natural heritage and the increasingly limited habitat available for native fauna, especially in light of our rapidly and dramatically changing environment.

Thank you in advance for your attention and consideration.

Best regards,

Jason M Hogle

Please, take a few minutes to speak out on this issue to the people who can protect it.  And contrary to my normal copyright, feel free to share this information where and when you think it appropriate—even if that means copying it to other outlets.

More dragons of the lake

Drought has created a dearth of insects this year.  The cicada-killer wasp colony that surrounds my home normally fills the air with nearly a hundred flying giants; this year perhaps 15 or 20 of the insects came to life: a repercussion of the lack of cicadas last year.  My patio for years has hosted dozens of millipedes each day; not so this year.  The lack of bees, ants, spiders, grasshoppers and all manner of small critters makes me fear for the ripple effect this will have on the rest of the food chain.

Yet I have been lucky enough to find some signs of life in that tiny world arachnids and insects call home.  And where I’ve been unable to scratch that itch with what is, I’ve been able to dredge up what was from the photo archives.  (I’ll admit I’m making a concerted effort to clear out the flood of images I’ve collected that haven’t found a home.  Otherwise they get swept into the dustbin to make room for new collections.)

So here’s another sampling of dragonflies from White Rock Lake.  There are more to come, sure, and reaching back years means not all will be of the best quality.  But oh well…

Atlantic bluet (Enallagma doubledayi) perched on grass seed (20080921_12564)

Atlantic bluet (Enallagma doubledayi)

Western forktail (Ischnura perparva) perched on a dry reed (2009_03_08_012977)

Western forktail (Ischnura perparva)

Blue-ringed dancer (Argia sedula) perched on a blade of grass (2009_07_07_026222)

Blue-ringed dancer (Argia sedula)

Swift setwing (Dythemis velox) perched on a dry twig (2009_07_07_026187)

Swift setwing (Dythemis velox)

Halloween pennant (Celithemis eponina) perched on a grass stalk (2009_07_06_026100)

Halloween pennant (Celithemis eponina)

Dusky dancer (Argia translata) perched on the end of a blade of grass (2009_07_07_026148)

Dusky dancer (Argia translata)