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5.18.21
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Democracy Dies in Darkness
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HOW FLORIDA IS GETTING ITS PINK BACK


HOW FLORIDA IS GETTING ITS PINK BACK

Sugarloaf Key, Fla.
(Doug Finger for The Washington Post)
By Lori Rozsa
May 26, 2024 at 5:00 a.m.
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MERRITT ISLAND, Fla. — When Keith Ramos heard a small flock of American
flamingos had landed last fall at the nature preserve he oversees off Florida’s
Atlantic coast, he rushed to get a once-in-a-lifetime glimpse of the gangly pink
birds in the wild.

“I ran over there, and of course they were gone,” said Ramos, the manager of
Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, where a flamingo sighting had last been
recorded in 1992. “I figured I missed my chance forever.”

But a month later, they were spotted again. Then a separate and larger flock was
seen in nearby Mosquito Lagoon. The birds seemed to be right at home, preening
their blush-colored feathers and grazing on shrimp near a sandbar.

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Indeed, in the past nine months, flamingos have appeared throughout Florida in
places where they haven’t been seen in decades — sightings scientists hope mark
the return of one of the state’s most celebrated symbols.

They’ve been photographed while taking a leisurely swim within eyeshot of office
buildings in Tampa Bay, hanging out with pelicans near Sanibel Island and
sharing a sandspit with great blue herons just a few miles from Kennedy Space
Center.

A group of flamingos preen their feathers while enjoying the shallow waters
along Lake Ingraham in Monroe County, Fla., on Jan. 4. (Larry Manfredi Birding
and Nature Tours)

Researchers believe the new arrivals blew in with Hurricane Idalia last August,
probably from Mexico or the Bahamas, where conservation efforts over the past 50
years have helped flamingo populations recover from near extinction. It wasn’t
the first time a powerful storm swept the birds to Florida. But in most of those
instances, the flamingos left after only a few days.

This time, they stayed.

Earlier this month, Audubon Florida released the results of a February field
study that documented 101 wild American flamingo sightings around the state —
with more people reporting seeing them in a single week than at any other point
in time since the early 1900s.



The findings have excited birders and renewed a debate about whether flamingos
should be classified as a threatened species by the state wildlife commission —
a measure scientists say could help ensure Florida gets its pink back for good.

Jerry Lorenz, Audubon Florida’s director of research, said the 101 flamingos
spotted during the survey represent “the floor of this new population,” and that
there are likely more. He said the return of flamingos is an encouraging sign
that the birds are adapting even while rising sea levels threaten their
habitats.

“The fact that they’re still hanging out in Florida, that they’re staying, gives
us reason for optimism,” Lorenz said.

Scroll to continue

Flamingos flying near Skimmer Island, Fla., on March 15. (Kathy Kay/Adventures
in Paradise)
Avid birder Thomas Pafford went to Merritt Island, Fla., on April 23 in hopes of
spotting Florida wildlife. (Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post)
Merritt Island, Fla.
(Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post)




‘IT STARTED WITH FLAMINGOS’

Flamingos are intertwined more closely with Florida’s iconography than perhaps
any animal except the alligator.

Images of the bird of unexpected proportions — adults stand, on average, five
feet tall — appear on Lotto tickets, cocktail straws and tropical Christmas
decorations. Hundreds of businesses have chosen to stake their success on the
fluorescent fowl, from Flamingo AC & Heating Services in the Tampa Bay area to
Flamingo Coffee Roasters in Jacksonville.

“I think it’s because they’re so visually stunning,” said Rick Kilby, an author
who has spent years documenting the vestiges of “Old Florida,” the age before
theme parks and interstates. “The brilliant salmon pink color, the black beak,
it’s almost like somebody painted them.”

Wild flamingos near Tampa in the fall of 2023, after Hurricane Idalia tore
through the region. (Jeff Liechty/Audubon Florida)

Nearly 200 years ago, somebody did paint them — the naturalist John James
Audubon, who traveled to the Florida Keys in 1832 “for the purpose of studying
these lovely birds in their own beautiful islands.”

He also wanted to shoot one, but failed many times, and ended up having to rely
on someone else’s dead bird for the details he used to draw “Plate 431: American
Flamingo” for his book “The Birds of America.”

Flamingos flourished in Florida in the 1800s, with colonies of more than 1,000
living around the Keys and the Everglades. Researchers say shallow, salty mud
flats in Florida Bay between the Keys and the mainland suit their feeding and
nesting preferences.

Neon pink sign of a flamingo surrounds a fun fact about flamingos that states
American flamingos are among the tallest birds in the United States – they reach
five feet in height, with a wingspan that also stretches out five feet. They
weigh five to six pounds.

Did you know? American flamingos are among the tallest birds in the United
States – they reach five feet in height, with a wingspan that also stretches out
five feet. They weigh five to six pounds.

Did you know? American flamingos are among the tallest birds in the United
States – they reach five feet in height, with a wingspan that also stretches out
five feet. They weigh five to six pounds.

Did you know? American flamingos are among the tallest birds in the United
States – they reach five feet in height, with a wingspan that also stretches out
five feet. They weigh five to six pounds.

Did you know? American flamingos are among the tallest birds in the United
States – they reach five feet in height, with a wingspan that also stretches out
five feet. They weigh five to six pounds.

But the plume trade all but wiped them out. Historic reports indicate a single
hunter could kill upward of 100 flamingos a day, plucking their feathers to be
sold for women’s hats and selling the rest for meat. Millions of wading birds
such as flamingos and egrets were slaughtered each year until the landmark
federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act was signed into law in 1918, prohibiting their
capture and killing.

By then it was too late for flamingos in Florida. But while the birds themselves
were disappearing, the images of them published in books such as Audubon’s tome
and works of fiction continued to grab the attention of the American public.

Airport workers walk past the “Phoebe the Flamingo” sculpture at a deserted
Tampa International Airport on Aug. 29, 2023, in Tampa. (Chris O'Meara/AP)

Then came the land boom. Impresarios set up roadside attractions for curious
out-of-towners to see a flamingo up close. In the 1930s, Hialeah Park Race Track
in Miami-Dade County imported 140 flamingos from Cuba to dot the grounds. The
famous birds even inspired literature, with American writer and conservationist
Kirk Munroe penning an adventure novel titled “The Flamingo Feather.”

“He wanted to sell exotic tales about Florida, and flamingos were part of that,”
Kilby said.

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Even as flamingo sightings in the Florida wild dwindled to zero by the mid-20th
century, the association between the Sunshine State and the rose-hued bird grew.
Hotels and motels were named after flamingos. They were featured on postcards,
souvenir snow globes and keychains. In the 1980s, they played a starring role in
the opening credits of “Miami Vice.”

“That show was a high water mark for visual culture during that time period,”
Kilby said. “And it started with flamingos.”

Scroll to continue

Wild flamingos gather near Treasure Island, Fla., in 2023. (Holley Short/Audubon
Florida)
Four flamingos near Skimmer Island in Florida this spring. (Chris
L'Abbé/Adventures in Paradise)
Everglades National Park
(Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post)




A BIRD NAMED CONCHY

Despite the fanfare, for years Florida officials rejected the idea that
flamingos were native to the state, in part because so few were seen during the
past 140 years. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission concluded
those that were seen in the wild were visitors from the Caribbean or zoo
escapees.

Then Conchy was rescued from an airport runway in the Florida Keys.

The bird — named after the Conch Republic, the nickname for Key West — was
discovered alongside two other flamingos wading and feeding in shallow water
near the Naval Air Station on Boca Chica in 2015. Efforts to shoo them away from
the edges of the fighter jet runways worked for the two older birds, but Conchy
(pronounced ‘conky’) wouldn’t leave.

Conchy the flamingo is seen in 2015 after being fitted with a satellite
transmitter and leg band in Everglades National Park. (Ron Magill)

Biologists at Zoo Miami eventually captured the young bird, and before releasing
him in the Everglades, attached a transmitter and ID tag to the bird.

Conchy’s habits and movements taught researchers more about flamingos in Florida
in two years than was known in the previous 100 years.

Neon pink sign of a flamingo surrounds a fun fact about flamingos that states
fossil records show flamingos were present on Earth more than 30 million years
ago.

Did you know? Fossil records show flamingos were present on Earth more than 30
million years ago.

Did you know? Fossil records show flamingos were present on Earth more than 30
million years ago.

Did you know? Fossil records show flamingos were present on Earth more than 30
million years ago.

Did you know? Fossil records show flamingos were present on Earth more than 30
million years ago.

He stayed in Florida, rather than fly to Mexico or the Bahamas, where
researchers assumed he’d come from. They learned that he preferred to stay
mostly on land and in shallow mud flats. He foraged for food in salty puddles
where small fish, shrimp and other tiny crustaceans live. He moved around more
in the afternoon and early evening, and he traveled longer distances in the
summer.

When Category 4 Hurricane Irma made landfall in the Keys in September of 2017
and thrashed Florida Bay, researchers worried that he had been killed.

But a few days later, his transmitter started beeping again, and people reported
seeing a flamingo with metal tags around his legs. After spending two years on
his own, Conchy was photographed with a group of four other flamingos in the
Bay.

Frank Ridgley, Zoo Miami’s conservation and research manager, releases Conchy in
2015 after the flamingo was fitted with a satellite transmitter and leg band in
Everglades National Park. (Ron Magill)

His transmitter has since failed for good, but researchers think Conchy is most
likely still alive and could be for decades. One of the oldest wild flamingos on
record is estimated to have been nearly 50 years old.

“I have high hopes that he’s still out there,” said Steven Whitfield, a wildlife
biologist who helped tag Conchy.

Scroll to continue

A flamingo sails just above the water near Cedar Key, Fla., on Jan. 3. (Tedd
Greenwald/Florida Museum of Natural History)
Sugarloaf Key, Fla.
(Doug Finger for The Washington Post)




PINK RETURN

Bolstered by the data collected from Conchy’s wanderings, an informal group of
scientists and researchers dubbed the Florida Flamingo Working Group began
mounting a case to classify the birds as a native species.

They presented new information, including photos of flamingo eggs found in the
Keys in the 1880s, showing that the birds had nested in Florida in the past.

Neon pink sign of a flamingo surrounds a fun fact about flamingos that states
that flamingos form pair bonds that last for years, and each pair produces only
one egg per year. It’s laid on a mud nest on the ground that looks like a
miniature volcano.

Did you know? Flamingos form pair bonds that last for years, and each pair
produces only one egg per year. It’s laid on a mud nest on the ground that looks
like a miniature volcano.

Did you know? Flamingos form pair bonds that last for years, and each pair
produces only one egg per year. It’s laid on a mud nest on the ground that looks
like a miniature volcano.

Did you know? Flamingos form pair bonds that last for years, and each pair
produces only one egg per year. It’s laid on a mud nest on the ground that looks
like a miniature volcano.

Did you know? Flamingos form pair bonds that last for years, and each pair
produces only one egg per year. It’s laid on a mud nest on the ground that looks
like a miniature volcano.

But while the evidence convinced the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission to change the designation of the birds from nonnative to native on
its website, commissioners in 2021 rejected the group’s proposal to list
flamingos as a threatened species in the state.

The scientists consider that designation key; it requires the state to devise a
management plan and help fund flamingo studies.

Wild flamingos gather near Tampa, in the fall of 2023, after Hurricane Idalia
hit Florida. (Jeff Liechty/Audubon Florida)

Despite billions of dollars spent on restoring the Everglades and Florida Bay,
impacts on flamingos and other birds from rising sea levels and climate change
“are likely to occur,” according to a state report from 2021.

But the report also notes that flamingos could benefit from some of those
changes. Florida’s other large pink bird, the roseate spoonbill, is abandoning
the Everglades and moving farther north because traditional feeding and nesting
grounds are frequently inundated.

Researchers speculate that flamingos — with their longer legs and appetite for
saltier water — are possibly better adapted to the changes.

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The state agreed to monitor the birds, but so far, that hasn’t happened,
Whitfield said. In a statement, the wildlife commission said it doesn’t monitor
flamingos because they are not listed as a threatened species. The agency noted
a 2021 state report which concludes the American flamingo should not be
classified as a threatened species in Florida because the state has “an
extremely small fraction” of the global population.

Even without a special state designation, flamingo fever is once again taking
hold in Florida.

A Republican lawmaker introduced a bill to replace mockingbirds with flamingos
as the state bird earlier this year. The measure ultimately failed, after two
Democratic lawmakers said that while they were fans of flamingos, they thought
it best to do a survey first and see what other native species the public might
want to consider, including blue Florida scrub jays.

Several flamingos were spotted in flight at Merritt Island, Fla., on April 22.
(Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post)

After Idalia, birdwatchers began recording their flamingo sightings online, and
tourists have submitted their own glimpses on eBird.

Mitch Cruzan is one of them. He traveled from Oregon to Florida on a
birdwatching trip to Merritt Island in March. In a torrential rain, he saw the
birds feeding and swooping their heads back and forth in the water.

“It was a kind of classic flamingo moment,” said Cruzan, a biology professor at
Portland State University.

Lots of other people are looking for those moments, too. Merritt Island refuge
staff said visitors to the area are up 20 percent over past year, which they
believe is mostly from flamingo sightseers.

A flamingo stands in shallow water in Lake Ingraham in Monroe County, Fla., on
Jan. 4. (Larry Manfredi Birding and Nature Tours)

The Florida Flamingo Working Group members want to capitalize on that interest
to keep flamingos at the top of mind for state officials as they seek funding
for studying the birds with an eye toward keeping them in the state permanently.

“It’s time for flamingos to come home,” Whitfield said. “They belong here.”

ABOUT THIS STORY

Top photo: Flamingos stand in shallow water at Everglades National Park. (Peter
Zarba/Everglades National Park)

Editing by Christine Armario and Kainaz Amaria. Photo editing by Max Becherer
and Natalia Jimenez. Drone footage by Doug Finger. Video by Drea Cornejo. Video
editing by Neeti Upadhye. Design and development by Agnes Lee. Design editing by
Madison Walls. Copy editing by Dorine Bethea.

Share
217 Comments
Lori RozsaLori Rozsa is a reporter based in Florida who covers the state for The
Washington Post. She is a former correspondent for People magazine and a former
reporter and bureau chief for the Miami Herald. @lori_rozsa


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