Guam's Birds Gone: Can Forest Survive?

Premna obtusifolia, or False Elder, the fruiting tree on the island of Guam that Rogers and her colleagues addressed in the study.
(Image credit: Haldre Rogers, University of Washington)

This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation.

Can forests that have lost all of their birds still function normally? This is an important question for the now bird-less forests on the island of Guam, an island in the western Pacific. How did Guam lose its birds? In the mid-1940s, the brown tree snake was accidentally introduced to what was then snake-free Guam. This snake became Guam's new top predator and ate its way through a buffet of the island's bird community. As a result, 10 of the island's 12 forest bird species are now extinct on Guam and the two surviving forest bird species remain only in tiny, localized populations where snakes are controlled. Guam's now silent forests currently hold about 13,000 snakes per square mile. I started to think about the potential ecological impacts of bird loss in 2002, when two years out of college, I was hired by the U.S. Geological Survey to develop a "Rapid Response Team" that would identify and eradicate new populations of brown tree snakes on U.S.-associated Pacific Islands. Although I had heard the snake story in my college conservation biology course, I did not know where Guam was when I applied for the job.  Yet, three weeks later, I was on a plane headed there.

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