Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 38 | Page 59

In connection with the listing the Service published “Rufa Red Knot Background Information and Threats Assessment,” a thorough study of the species that is almost 400 pages long and includes about 65 pages of resources. Before the official listing the Service conducted over 130 days of public comment periods, held three public hearings, and received more than 17,400 comments. In an important article featured in the journal, Science, in May of 2016, researcher Jan A. van Gils from the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research and his colleagues sought to explain a dramatic decline in the number of red knots that spend the winter in West Africa. They presented evidence that pressure on the birds from climate changes in their breeding area may have caused the decline in numbers of birds. SUMMER/FALL 2017 • VOLUME 38 Because food supplies in their Arctic breeding grounds are dwindling, the physical size of the newer generation of birds is smaller. They have shorter bills, and they are not able to dig as far into the sand for the clams on which they usually feed during the winter. They are about 15 percent smaller than their counterparts from 30 years ago and must resort to feeding on less nutritious rhizomes (grass roots). Looking at the evidence gathered over three decades, Dr. van Gils said, “I foresee some sort of crash.” The migration path of the red knots these scientists studied is from Mauritania to the Russian Arctic and back, but their changes may bode ill for red knots on the Atlantic flyway. Martin Wikelski, a scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, with another colleague, reviewed this latest research with some reservations about the conclusions, but 57