Kenneth E. Stager (January 28, 1915 in Uniontown, Pennsylvania – May 13, 2009 in West Los Angeles)[1] was an American ornithologist who served as a curator at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.[2]

Clipperton Island edit

In 1958, Stager visited Clipperton Island and saw that the breeding colonies of brown boobies and masked boobies were being devastated by feral pigs that had been introduced to the island by earlier travelers. Appalled at the depredations visited by feral pigs upon the island's brown booby and masked booby colonies (reduced to 500 and 150 birds, respectively), Stager procured a shotgun and removed all 58 pigs. By 2003, the colonies numbered 25,000 brown boobies and 112,000 masked boobies, the world's second-largest brown booby colony and largest masked booby colony.[3] [4][5]

However, according to author J. M. Skaggs,[6] Stager's expedition arrived outside the nesting season, and apparently did not take into account the seasonal variations in seabird populations present on the island. With no personal experience or scientific measurements, they relied merely upon earlier, non-scientific accounts citing "millions of birds" and the current paucity of resident specimens to arrive at the opinion that the bird population had been devastated by the feral pigs. Without the pigs to keep them in check, land crab (Johngarthia planata) populations surged, devastating the island's vegetation.[7]

Stager's actions served to inspire the creation of a biodiversity conservation NGO called Island Conservation, which has as a mission to prevent extinctions by removing invasive species from islands.

References edit

  1. ^ McLellan, Dennis (2 June 2009). "Kenneth E. Stager dies at 94; curator of birds and mammals at L.A. County Natural History Museum". Obituary. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  2. ^ "Ending extinction or playing God?". the Atlantic. 27 December 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
  3. ^ "Clipperton Island: Pig Sty, Rat Hole and Booby Prize" (PDF). Marine Ornithology. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  4. ^ Pitman, Robert L.; Ballance, Lisa T.; Bost, Charly. "Clipperton Island: Pig sty, rat hole and booby prize" (PDF). Marine Ornithology. 33: 193–194. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-11-19. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
  5. ^ "Eradicating introduced mammals from Clipperton Island led to dramatic recovery of seabirds". BirdLife International. 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  6. ^ Skaggs, Jimmy M. (1989). Clipperton: A history of the island the world forgot. New York, NY: Walker and Company. ISBN 0-8027-1090-5.
  7. ^ Davie, P. (2015). Bieler R, Bouchet P, Gofas S, Marshall B, Rosenberg G, La Perna R, Neubauer TA, Sartori AF, Schneider S, Vos C, ter Poorten JJ, Taylor J, Dijkstra H, Finn J, Bank R, Neubert E, Moretzsohn F, Faber M, Houart R, Picton B, Garcia-Alvarez O (eds.). "Johngarthia planata (Stimpson, 1860)". MolluscaBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 22 February 2017.