Ocean
Watch
Friday, October 03, 2003
Fairy terns are friendly
and loved on Tern Island
Usually when someone looks over my shoulder while I'm
writing, my concentration flies right out the window. Here on Tern Island,
however, it's the window itself causing the problem.
At this moment, two fairy terns stand on its louvered
sill, reading over my shoulder.
OK, they aren't really looking at my computer screen,
but still.
How can a person get any work done when the cutest,
most sweet-tempered birds in the world sit not 2 feet from your chair?
Fairy terns, 12 inches long with a 28-inch wingspan,
are the darlings of Tern Island, but they are not its namesake.
That honor goes to sooty terns, seabirds slightly
larger than fairy terns that breed here by the thousands.
The black-and-white sooties are few people's favorites,
because of their 24-hour-a-day screeching calls, but almost everyone loves
the friendly fairies.
Their translucent, white wing feathers and big black
eyes evoke images of angels, and they hover fearlessly around your head
with Tinkerbell-like charm.
Another of fairy terns' intriguing qualities is their
habit of laying their eggs in perilous places.
Right now on Tern Island, fairy tern eggs and chicks
balance on bare branches, wobble on window ledges and teeter in tiny
depressions of concrete blocks and posts.
Since such precarious positioning causes parents to
lose many of their eggs and chicks, people love to root for them.
Approximately 500 to 750 pairs of fairy terns nest
(using the term loosely) on this 36-acre island, and it gets crowded.
Tern families reside on and near most of the buildings
here, including the concrete ledge around the base of the barracks.
Often, these attractive birds flutter up to the window
sills and give us a thrill.
Tern eggs frequently fall to the ground, and if they
don't, then the chicks often do.
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