
The Mariana fruit-doveunmistakable with puffs of vibrant colors across its chest and cresttoday lives mostly in zoos and on four small Pacific islands. The pigeon disappeared from Guam, along with nine other native birds, eliminated by voracious brown tree snakes that likely arrived on ships after World War II. Scientists are starting to piece together the effects of their lossamong them the possibility of a thinning forest canopy increasingly riddled with holes, like Swiss cheese. They hypothesize that without birds to disperse seeds, fast-growing pioneer plantslike papaya and sumac treeswont fill the gaps.
To test their theory, theyre clearing small patches in Guams canopy and those of other bird-rich islands nearby, then tracking how quickly pioneer plants fill in the blank spots. Without a狄ull canopy, the forest may灸e heating up, threatening wildlife and trees that thrive in cooler temperatures. Its very important to understand the implications of those [bird] declines, says Rice University ecologist Amy Dunham. The situation on Guamwhich is tragicprovides us with災 unique opportunity to究ee what happens when災ll seed-dispersal services provided by animals are lost from an entire ecosystem. And to help build a case for preventing such losses elsewhere.
This story originally ran in the July-August 2013 issue as "Missing Pigeons."