| |
(Click on photo for larger image.)

A brown pelican sits at a dock near
Crystal River.
(FWC photo by Karen Parker)
|
| |
Please don't feed the pelicans
June 17, 2008
Contact: Karen Parker, 386-758-0525
There's a new rule from the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) about feeding pelicans.
Don't do it.
Brown pelicans, due to their social nature,
become dependent on discarded fish and fish scraps. The birds
will often congregate in places where the scraps are readily
available and rely on the scraps as a major source of food.
In places where fish scraps are available, such
as at fish processing facilities or fish markets, the pelicans
will arrive day after day to eat, becoming habituated, according
to FWC biologists.
"Pelicans can become so used to their daily
"free" meals that they won't migrate south during the winter,
and as a result become sick, suffer frostbite on their feet or
die as a result of exposure," said James Rodgers, a research
biologist at the FWC's Gainesville Laboratory.
Another problem arises at fishing piers or other
spots where people are cleaning fish or where fishermen toss the
birds a few fish from time to time. The large bones left over
after filleting a fish can get stuck in the throat of the
pelican, eventually choking or starving the bird.
"Hanging out at the piers can develop into a
further problem when pelicans get caught with fishing hooks
while trying to steal fish directly from the fishing line. It's
not unusual to see a pelican with a hook embedded in its pouch
and fishing line trailing behind it," Rodgers said.
Embedded hooks can cause the soft skin of the
bird's pouch to tear. Such injuries can sometimes become
infected, which can lead to sickness and weakness. In
extreme cases, the bird may die from illness or from starvation
because it weakens to the point where it can't get enough food.
These concerns led FWC staff and other experts
to conclude these "free meals" were affecting the overall health
of brown pelican populations.
"To counter this problem, the Commission passed
a rule that is intended to stop the feeding of large numbers of
pelicans. This rule is considered necessary to maintain
healthy wild populations of brown pelicans in Florida," Rodgers
said.
The new rule states that the intentional feeding
or the placement of food that attracts pelicans and modifies the
natural behavior of the pelican so as to be detrimental to the
survival or health of a local population is prohibited.
It is no longer permitted under this rule to
dump or discharge large amounts of fish scraps, bycatch or
comparable materials from a fish house or similar facility which
attracts large numbers of pelicans to that area and causes
changes in the behavior of the pelicans. Though indirectly
feeding the pelicans, such large scale activities can have a
detrimental effect on a brown pelican population by inhibiting
migration and leading to cold weather induced illness and
injury.
Under the new rule, it is no longer permissible
for organized groups of people or organizations to feed groups
of pelicans at regular places and regular times when the
pelicans are not restrained or not directly under their care.
Public fishing piers and beaches which attract
large groups of fishermen may want to consider creating scrap
chutes where folks can dump the leftovers to keep them out of
the way of pelicans.
The intent of this rule is not to regulate the
occasional or the casual feeding of individual pelicans.
Individuals who are out fishing and happen to hand a scrap to a
begging pelican will not be cited for their behavior. This rule
provides an enforcement tool to resolve situations when large
scale feeding could negatively influence the health or survival
of a pelican.
"However, you can help keep pelican populations
healthy by not feeding them. One person feeding a pelican one
fish may not harm the bird, but problems do occur because
usually there are many people feeding that same pelican every
day," Rodgers said.
Another way to help is to use fish scrap
repositories at piers and docks, if they are available. If
they are not available, discard your fish scraps in a garbage
can or at home.
"Your efforts will help keep pelican populations
wild," Rodgers said.
Brown pelicans in Florida
Brown pelicans are large, shore-dwelling birds,
about 48 inches long, with a 6-7 foot wingspan. They weigh in at
about 8 pounds. They are strong swimmers and graceful
flyers, but are rather clumsy on land. They are long-lived
-- the oldest individual on record died at 43 years of age.
Pelicans can be seen along coasts from North to South America.
Pelicans are fish-eating birds. They have
excellent eyesight and hunt by searching for schools of small
bait fish while flying over the ocean, sometimes as high as 50
feet. When they see fish, they will dive steeply into the
water, often submerging completely, and capture the fish in
their large throat pouches.
Pelicans are highly social birds that often
congregate in large flocks throughout much of the year. They
also breed in large colonies, which may consist of several
hundred pairs, nesting in bushes, or in trees, usually on small
estuarine islands where they can be free from disturbance from
terrestrial predators. Nests are typically little more
than a shallow depression built from grass or reeds, over
interwoven sticks on supporting tree branches. Along the
East Coast of the United States, pelicans nest from South
Carolina to Florida (both coasts) and in Alabama, Louisiana, and
Texas across the Gulf. In southern Florida, nesting often
begins in the fall, but nesting farther north doesn't begin
until late winter or spring, with peak egg-laying often
occurring in March and April. Pelicans usually lay two to
three eggs that hatch in approximately one month. Like
many birds, newly hatched pelicans are featherless and
completely dependent upon their parents. Each young
pelican usually requires about 50 pounds of food and about 75
days to reach the point of fledging, or first flight.
Because of their size, pelicans are usually conspicuous and are
often a common fixture at marinas and fishing piers and can be
counted on to panhandle for food from the often compliant
fishermen.
The brown pelican nearly disappeared from North
America between the 1950s and early 1970s because of pesticides
in use at the time. The run-off containing those
pesticides entered rivers and eventually the ocean, which then
contaminated the fish. The pelicans fed on the fish which led to
a build-up of the pesticides in the birds. Many died. In
addition, the pesticides caused the surviving individuals to lay
thin-shelled eggs that often would be crushed under the weight
of the incubating birds.
The brown pelican was placed on the endangered
species list in 1970. Following the ban on DDT in 1972,
the reproduction rates of the pelicans significantly improved.
As a result, pelicans were taken off the endangered species list
in the southeast United States in 1985 and by the 1990s, pelican
populations had returned to pre-DDT levels. The brown
pelican is a success story for conservationists everywhere.
|