"A04" returns to Queen Bess

Ten years ago, a brown pelican was rescued from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. He was eventually returned to the waters of the Gulf, but before being released was fit with a leg band bearing his new name鈥擜04. And now, A04 has become part of an even bigger success story than its survival alone might suggest. He鈥檚 nesting on Queen Bess Refuge鈥攐ne of thousands of nesting pairs that are making the first post-restoration nesting season on there a huge success.

In the years since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the have worked tirelessly to restore habitat injured by the spill. One of our earliest and most significant achievements is restoration of , which was not only 鈥済round zero鈥� for coastal impacts of the spill but also a bellwether for the coastal land loss in Louisiana as a whole, having been reduced over time to just a small fraction of its original size.

鈥淭his island was a mess; an absolute mess. A lot of birds were oiled. A lot of the young were oiled,鈥� stated Todd Baker, Biologist with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

The project to restore bird habitat on Queen Bess Island, and was completed in a five -month window when birds were not nesting on the island. The restored island now includes 30 acres of brown pelican habitat and seven acres of tern and skimmer habitat. Biologists have observed 18 species nesting there this season, including tricolored herons, reddish egrets, roseate spoonbills, American oystercatchers, great egrets, and snowy egrets.

The success of the project is due in large part to the continued collaboration of the federal and state partners, and the persistence of all the stakeholders involved. The restoration project has been three years in the making, and while small in acreage compared to the larger restoration effort in coastal Louisiana, the island has a tremendous benefit to the waterbird populations of Louisiana and the larger northern Gulf Coast. Queen Bess Island is utilized by more than 60 species of birds and is the .

鈥淕oing from a pelican rescued during the early days of an oil spill when there didn鈥檛 even seem like there could be light at the end of the tunnel, to 10 years later a survivor, and now nesting on a restored island,鈥� said John Tirpak, Deputy Assistant Regional Director of Ecological Services with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 鈥淲e are all much stronger than even we know, and all it takes is for us to imagine a brighter future and then will it into existence,鈥� Tirpak added.

Welcome to Queen Bess, A04!

Stay tuned to the for more on the project and how we鈥檙e monitoring its success.