A burn for the tern
Sue Doyle
NEWPORT BEACH -- Smoke streamed through the sky above Tern Island on
Wednesday after officials burned a heap of vegetation that had tangled
the nesting area of an endangered bird.
Representatives from the state Department of Fish and Game burned one
mound of weeds to create a habitat suitable for the nesting of the
California least tern, which requires a sandy surface to lay its eggs.
The nesting season begins in May.
“We need less endangered species by getting them off the endangered list.
This is a way to help them,” said Erick Burres, a Fish and Game official
who oversees the Newport Beach area.
Burres and Don Houlihan, a scientific aid with the department, resembled
cross-country skiers as they clung to rakes for support and cautiously
trudged through mud toward the small, little-known island with their
equipment.
Normally, water that pours in from the San Diego Creek surrounds the
island, which is in the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve near the
Jamboree Road bridge. But Burres and Houlihan were able to get there
during Wednesday’s low tide.
Although the blaze was an unusual sight to behold, it didn’t seem to
alarm anybody in the area, which is frequented by mountain bikers and
joggers seeking a slice of serenity in urban Orange County.
Only the birds in the surrounding trees caused a commotion as the men
tiptoed through the brush.
Because the least tern is a federally protected species, residents caught
canoeing around its habitat area or hiking on the island can receive
fines for trespassing or even a jail sentence, Burres said.
Another controlled burn will take place on the island Friday to clear the
remaining weeds.
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