Beautiful, Rat-filled Island Seen From Space
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Adele Island: From space, you can't even see the rats.
Okay, it's not much of a tourism slogan, but this space-based image of a small island off the coast of northern Australia highlights a long-standing threat to bird life in the Pacific. Rattus exulans, the Polynesian rat, is an unwelcome intruder on this sandy outpost. The island is a major breeding site for several seabirds, and R. exulans is a notorious consumer of birds, chicks and eggs.
Humans have been spreading rats around the Pacific for thousands of years. According to the Invasive Species Compendium maintained by the agricultural nonprofit CABI, Polynesians colonizing the Pacific brought Polynesian rats to western islands like Samoa and Tonga as far back as 4,000 years ago. The discovery of the rats on Adele Island dates much later, to 1891 -- the first time R. exulans was spotted in Australian territory. Today, the rat exists on several Australian islands, but it has not reached the mainland.
This image of Adele island was taken by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station on June 11, according to NASA's Earth Observatory. From 249 miles (400 kilometers) up, the sandy base of the island can be seen below the water's surface. The island is 2 miles (2.9 km) long, according to Earth Observatory, but the sandbanks stretch out 15.2 miles (24.5 km) in length.
The island is 65 miles (104 km) from Australia, and rises no more than 13 feet (4 meters) above sea level. Its grassy, flat center shows few signs of humanity, other than the rats. A small solar-powered lighthouse is the only man-made structure on the island.
For birds, though, Adele island is paradise. The island is the nesting ground for more than 1 percent of the world population of Brown Boobies, Lesser Frigatebirds and is also home to non-breeding Red-necked Stints and Grey-tailed Tattlers, according to BirdLife International. A survey in 2004 recorded more than 24,000 birds on this tiny spit of sand.
Efforts are underway to rid the island of its rat population, according to Earth Observatory. These attempts have succeeded on other islands, including the no-longer-appropriately-named Rat Island in Alaska. Conservationist groups and the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife poisoned the rats on that island in 2008, and the spot was declared rat-free in 2010. Several hundred birds died in the controversial effort, but wildlife officials argued that the mass poisoning was necessary to allow many thousands more birds to live without the predation of rats.
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