March 17, 2008
ANOTHER
SUCCESSFUL TRASH CLEANUP IN CONDOR HABITAT ON WHITAKER PEAK
ForestWatch
Returns to Site Near the Sespe Wilderness; Volunteers Remove
More Than 125 Pounds of Trash
On Saturday,
March 15, fourteen ForestWatch volunteers returned to Whitaker
Peak, an area adjacent to the Sespe
Wilderness near the Ventura/LA county line. The site is
frequented by an adult California condor. Unfortunately, the
area is also littered with small bits of trash, which the
curious condor picks up and brings to her nearby nest,
endangering her young. By the time it started raining (and
snowing!), our volunteers had picked up more than 125 pounds of
microtrash and other debris from this area.
ForestWatch volunteers began their work at this site
in July 2007. However, there was so much
broken glass, shotgun shells, and other bits of trash scattered
about this site that we organized a second cleanup in September
2007, and then this third one in March 2008.
Our dedicated volunteers have now removed more than 325
pounds of microtrash and other debris from this site!
ForestWatch volunteers pick up microtrash to protect
endangered California condors nesting nearby.
Last year,
condor biologists at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
became concerned about large amounts of trash on Whitaker Peak. Several
condors have died or required surgery after ingesting these
small trash fragments. Since then, several organizations
including ForestWatch have organized volunteers to clean up the
area.
Microtrash is a
term used to describe small bits of debris like bottle caps,
rags, screws, bolts, wires, glass, and other materials found in
condor habitat. Condors, curious by nature, are attracted to
microtrash, and often ingest it or bring it back to their nests,
where condor chicks swallow the small pieces. Microtrash is not
digestible and is fatal unless it's surgically removed.
Stomach contents of a
California condor. Photo courtesy USFWS.
Microtrash is one of the
leading threats to the recovery of the California condor. It's
been the cause of nest failure for three of 11 chicks hatched in
southern California previous to 2007. Another chick was
recently removed from its nest to have the trash surgically
removed.
The problem is particularly troublesome
for one condor pair nesting at the nearby Hopper Mountain
National Wildlife Refuge. This pair had two previous nestings in
which their chick was full of trash. The female wears an
electronic transmitter, and condor biologists know that she
frequents the Whitaker Peak area. They suspect that this site is
where she picks up much of this trash.
A radiograph showing microtrash
ingested by a condor.
Photo courtesy USFWS.
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