Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 38 | Page 58

Red Knots: Sentinels by the Sea F Story and photographs by Shauneen Hutchinson  ive years ago we featured red knots on our cover and included a story about them in that issue. The article was largely a celebration of a small bird (the size of a robin) that often migrates from the tip of South American to the Canadian Arctic and back in a single year—18,000 miles. We were especially interested because a significant percentage of the knots that migrate along the Atlantic flyway stop over to rest and refuel on the Kiawah Island beach. Quite a bit has happened to this little bird since then, and in this issue, we are looking at some of the events that have occurred and the research that has been published during the intervening years. In December of 2014, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the rufa subspecies of red knot 56 would receive protection as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. The effective date of the listing was January 11, 2015. Service director Dan Ashe stated, “The red knot is a remarkable and resilient bird known to migrate thousands of miles a year from the Canadian Arctic to the southern tip of South America. Unfortunately, this hearty shorebird is no match for the widespread effects of emerging challenges like climate change and coastal development, coupled with the historic impacts of horseshoe crab over-harvesting, which have sharply reduced its population in recent decades.” Since the 1980s, red knot population in many areas has decreased by almost 75 percent. The graphic on the opposite page prepared by the Service tells the story effectively. Naturally Kiawah