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Marbled Murrelets in Portland!

June 2, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
No take-out. Delivery only. A young murrelet is nest bound and relies on its parents to catch and delivery its meals: small fish the chick will swallow whole and headfirst. Pen-and-ink drawing by Paul Jones.

No take-out. Delivery only. A young murrelet is nest bound and relies on its parents to catch and delivery its meals: small fish the chick will swallow whole and headfirst. Pen-and-ink drawing by Paul Jones.

Join me this Thursday night at 7 p.m. in Portland, Oregon, for a presentation I'll be giving with conservation dynamo Paul Engelmeyer, manager of Portland Audubon's Ten-Mile Creek Sanctuary. Our talk will focus on the discovery and recovery of the marbled murrelet, a federally threatened seabird that nests in the mature coastal forests of the Pacific Northwest.

The story of this enigmatic little bird whose nest was first discovered 40 years ago this year will delight you. The work being done to protect this species and its forest and marine habitats will inspire you.

The presentation is free. Copies of Rare Bird will be available for purchase. For more information click here.

 

Tags Portland Audubon Society, Paul Engelmeyer, Rare Bird, marbled murrelet
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Marbled Murrelets in May

April 29, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
Marbled Murrelets are a-comin' in! These seabirds are moving in closer to shore in the Pacific Northwest for the Summer 2014 breeding season. I'll be moving around the Pacific Northwest this month to share the tale of this fascinating and endangered…

Marbled Murrelets are a-comin' in! These seabirds are moving in closer to shore in the Pacific Northwest for the Summer 2014 breeding season. I'll be moving around the Pacific Northwest this month to share the tale of this fascinating and endangered seabird. See this month's events below.

Marbled Murrelets are Pacific Coast seabirds that nest in the mature and old-growth coniferous forests from Alaska to central California during the late spring and summer. If you find yourself in such a forest within 50 miles of the marine water, you might be in murrelet nesting habitat. If you're up before dawn or listening carefully around dusk, you might hear or see these birds flying over the tree tops as they make their way inland from the sea to the trees.

 To learn more about the life history, biology, and conservation of this unusual seabird, please join me at one of my upcoming presentations--a combination thought-provoking slide show,  book reading, and Q&A. Some events include book sales and signing of Rare Bird: Pursing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet (reissued in paperback by Mountaineers Books in 2013).

May 2   Wentachee River Institute--Leavenworth, WA

May 3   A Book For All Seasons--Leavenworth, WA

May 4   Nisqually Land Trust--Ashford, WA

May 12 Timberland Regional Library--Tumwater, WA

May 15 Golden Gate Audubon Society--San Francisco, CA

And, hey! Look at Rare Bird at the top at Orca Books this week!

Wow! I'm on top of Jimmy Carter!

Wow! I'm on top of Jimmy Carter!

Tags rare bird, Nisqually Land Trust, Golden Gate Audubon Society, Timberland Regional Library, Rare Bird, marbled murrelet
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The Marbled Murrelet Diet

January 14, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
Sunday night I found myself caught between a smelt and a rare bird. I gave up eating sushi (mostly) since writing my book on the marbled murrelet, but now I have a different problem.

Sunday night I found myself caught between a smelt and a rare bird. I gave up eating sushi (mostly) since writing my book on the marbled murrelet, but now I have a different problem.

We all try to do the right thing most of the time, but sometimes we find ourselves unable to make the best right decision.

I am a loyal supporter of Olympia's fabulous Farmers' Market, which has just decided to extend its April-December season by opening up on Saturdays year long. My husband and I went down to the market Saturday in the pouring rain. We decided too make a meal of whatever local, fresh produce was available right then. We bought kale and carrots and then hunted for some protein. We found it: smoked salmon mostly and some very fresh-looking fish we found out were smelt. Smelt!

 That's one of the many prey species of the marbled murrelet! These are small, schooling fish also known as forage fish. Forage fish!

Forage fish around the globe are suffering from overfishing. There is a global crisis happening right now as  forage fish populations are declining at alarming rates. Many forage fish never appear in restaurants, but are ground up to make animal feed and fertilizer--which apparently we need in unsustainable quantities.

The normally abundant forage fish are a critical link between the ocean phytoplankton  and zooplankton and many seabirds, larger fish, and marine mammals. The fish marbled murrelets commonly prey on includes sardines, anchovies, juvenile herring, saury, and sandlance, and smelt. But I wondered...were the smelt actually one of the over-fished species?

Luckily I had my wallet-size Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch guide with me.  Unfortunately smelt wasn't on the list of "best choices," "good alternatives," or "avoid." Hmmm....so we bought eight fish for $3 and were told to fry them and eat them whole.

The light breading of the smelt.

The light breading of the smelt.

The frying in olive oil of half the smelt without heads as another than myself wasn't sure he wanted to eat the whole fish the way a murrelet would. Note: these smelt are probably twice the size of any a murrelet could handle.

The frying in olive oil of half the smelt without heads as another than myself wasn't sure he wanted to eat the whole fish the way a murrelet would. Note: these smelt are probably twice the size of any a murrelet could handle.

Two fried smelt on a bed of local greens. Please ignore the exotic lemon wedge. These fish were delicious and entirely edible. But still...

Two fried smelt on a bed of local greens. Please ignore the exotic lemon wedge. These fish were delicious and entirely edible. But still...

So we ate our dinner--savoring our first smelt from the Pacific Northwest and sauteed kale from a local vendor at our local Farmers' Market. We also ate some leftover rice and beans to round out the meal. But I had a nagging feeling that my willful ignorance about the smelt situation. I looked again at my fish-buying guide to see if I had overlooked the smelt--no I hadn't. But I did see a note that due to the size of the guide (wallet-sized), the full list of recommendations is posted at seafoodwatch.org. I searched for "smelt" and up came a page of different kinds of smelt.

Here is what I learned: I should avoid eulcahon, also known as smelt, caught in British Columbia in conical or seine nets, and that smelt, also known as eulachon, wild caught and certified by the Marine Stewardship Council, were a good alternative. Hmmm....what had my husband and I bought? Were were our smelt/eulachon caught and how? Ii could find no information on the smelt purveyor online.

I Googled "eulachon Pacific Northwest fisheries" and discovered--to my dismay--that in 2010, the population of eulachon from the U.S.-Canada border south to include Washington, Oregon, and California, was listed by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) as a threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. I hunted for the NOAA seafood-buying guide, but did not find one on this otherwise excellent website.

Now what? What did this threatened status mean for the dinner table? Were all Pacific eulachon in the listed range off limits to fishing?

I went back to the NOAA site and read that they designated 16 specific areas as critical habitat within California, Oregon, and Washington--an area of freshwater creeks, rivers, and their associated estuaries totaling 335 mles) of habitat. And that  the "Tribal lands of four Indian Tribes are excluded from designation after evaluating the impacts of designation and benefits of exclusion associated with Tribal land ownership and management by the Tribes." The four tribes are the Lower Elwha Tribe, Quinault Tribe, Resighini Rancheria, or Yurok Tribe.

Given that there is a chance that  tribal fisherman--possibly Quinault--supplied our smelt to the seafood retailer at the Farmers' Market. I couldn't find this kind of information about the retailer online so, I will just have to hold off on another smelt fry until I can get back down to the market to find out. Or spend another hour researching this on the Internet.

Depending on what I learn, will I buy more smelt? Should I support the Farmers' Market and the local fishing industry (and get a load of delicious protein with Omega 3s for $3) or should I find some better source of protein with less environmental impact? Can I offset my smelt purchase by biking or taking the bus to the market? By making a contribution to a marine-conservation group? By tracking down non-GMO tofu monger and learning to love "soylent white?"

I am sure you are shaking your head, wondering why anyone should worry about eating a "threatened" forage fish every once in a while? Well, as I used to say to my kids when they wanted to bring home a rock from a national park, "What if everybody did that?" 

Tags marbled murrelet, marlbed murrelet prey, marbled murrelet diet, forage fish, smelt, Rare Bird
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Marbled Murrelet & Rare Bird Talks

November 6, 2013 Maria Mudd Ruth
Illustration by Paul Harris Jones from Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet 

Illustration by Paul Harris Jones from Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet 

My upcoming presentations feature not only book sales and signing of Rare Bird, but also a virtual experience of a marbled murrelet in the old-growth forest, how and why I wrote Rare Bird despite m ignorance, the life history of this forest-nesting seabird, my very short story of the 185-year-long search to find this bird's nest, some inconvenient truths, exposure of my personal hypocrisy, some hard questions, and some shockingly easy things you can do to help save this imperiled bird.  

Here is the rundown of November's presentations in Greater Puget Sound:

November 8 at 7 p.m. at Orca Books, Olympia

November 12 at 7 p.m. at the Cotton Building, Port Townsend

November 14 at the Mountaineers Seattle Program Center, Seattle

November 17 at 4 p.m. at Village Books, Bellingham (Fairhaven)

November 22 at 5:30 p.m. at Trimble Hall, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma

For more detail, go to my events page here.

 

 

 

 

Tags Rare Bird, orca books, seattle mountaineers, village books, university of puget sound, north cacades insitute
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Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet

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The photo for my blog captures the spirit of the accidental naturalist (my husband, actually). The body of water featured here, Willapa Bay, completely drained out at low tide during our camping trip at the Willapa National Wildlife Refuge, leaving …

The photo for my blog captures the spirit of the accidental naturalist (my husband, actually). The body of water featured here, Willapa Bay, completely drained out at low tide during our camping trip at the Willapa National Wildlife Refuge, leaving us a pleasant several hours of experiencing the life of the turning tide.

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