St. Paul Island Uses Peanut Butter and Black Lights to Search for Rat
(JUNEAU, Alaska) — On an island of windswept tundra in the Bering Sea, hundreds of miles from mainland Alaska, a resident sitting outside their home saw — well, did they see it? They were pretty sure they saw it.
A rat.
The alleged sighting would not have garnered attention in many parts of the world, but it caused a stir on St. Paul Island, part of the Pribilof Islands, a haven for birds sometimes called the “Galapagos of the north” due to its diverse life.
This is because rats that sneak onto vessels can quickly populate and overwhelm remote islands, decimating bird populations by consuming eggs, chicks, or even adults, disrupting once-thriving ecosystems.
Shortly after receiving the resident’s report in June, wildlife officials arrived at the apartment complex and scoured the nearby grasses, the building’s perimeter, and the area beneath the porch, searching for tracks, bite marks, or droppings. They set peanut butter-baited traps and placed trail cameras to confirm the rat’s existence but have found no evidence so far.
“We know — because we’ve seen this on other islands and in other locations in Alaska and across the world — that rats absolutely decimate seabird colonies, so the threat is never one that the community would take lightly,” said Lauren Divine, director of the Aleut Community of St. Paul Island’s ecosystem conservation office.
The anxiety on St. Paul Island is the latest development amidst ongoing efforts to eliminate or prevent non-native rats from invading some of the most remote yet ecologically diverse islands in Alaska and across the globe.
Rodents have been successfully removed from hundreds of islands worldwide — including one in Alaska’s Aleutian chain formerly known as “Rat Island,” according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. But such efforts can take years and cost millions of dollars, so prevention is deemed the most effective defense.
Around the developed areas of St. Paul, officials have deployed blocks of wax — “chew blocks” — designed to record any telltale incisor marks. Some of the blocks are made with ultraviolet material, which allow inspectors equipped with black lights to search for glowing droppings.
They’ve also asked residents to keep an eye out for any rodents and are seeking permission to have the U.S. Department of Agriculture bring a dog to the island to sniff out any rats. Canines are otherwise prohibited from the Pribilofs to protect fur seals.
There have been no traces of any rats since the reported sighting this summer, but the search and heightened state of vigilance are likely to continue for months.
Divine compared the search to trying to find a needle in a haystack “and not knowing if a needle even exists.”
The community of about 350 people — clustered on the southern tip of a treeless island characterized by rolling hills, rimmed by cliffs and battered by storms — has long had a rodent surveillance program that includes rat traps near the airport and at developed waterfront areas where vessels arrive, designed to detect or eliminate any rats that might appear.
Still, it took nearly a year to capture the last known rat on St. Paul, which was believed to have hopped off a barge. It was found dead in 2019 after evading the community’s initial defenses. This highlights why even an unsubstantiated sighting is taken so seriously, Divine said.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is planning an environmental review to analyze eradicating the potentially tens of thousands of rats on four uninhabited islands in the far-flung, volcano-pocked Aleutian chain, hundreds of miles southwest of St. Paul. More than 10 million seabirds of varying species nest in the Aleutians.
The diversity and number of breeding birds on islands with established, non-native rat populations are noticeably low, the agency has stated. Carcasses of least auklets and crested auklets, known for their noisy nesting colonies in rocky areas, have been found in rat-food caches on Kiska Island, one of the four islands, where rat footprints have been spotted on the wet, sandy shoreline.
If the agency proceeds, it might take five years for the first of the projects to be launched, and given the extensive planning, testing, and research required for each island, it could take decades to complete all of them, said Stacey Buckelew, an island invasive species biologist with Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge.
But such efforts are important steps to help seabirds already facing challenges including climate change, Buckelew said.
The success of what was long called Rat Island, a tract in the Aleutians roughly half the size of Manhattan, shows how effective eradication programs can be. Rats are believed to have first arrived with a Japanese shipwreck in the late 18th century. Fur traders introduced arctic foxes there the following century.
The foxes were eradicated in 1984, but it was nearly a quarter century later when wildlife agents and conservation groups eliminated the rats by dropping poison pellets from a helicopter. Those involved said that without nesting seabirds, the island was eerily silent compared to the cacophony of other, rat-free islands, and it even smelled different.
Since the eradication of rats, researchers have observed native birds thriving, even documenting species thought to have been wiped out by rats. The island is once again known by the name originally bestowed by the Unangan people native to the Aleutians: Hawadax. Researchers have found tufted puffins, which dig burrows into cliff edges and are defenseless against rats or foxes, as well as eagle and falcon nests.
During surveys before the eradication, researchers heard no song sparrows, but during a 2013 trip their sounds were almost incessant, Buckelew said at that time.
Donald Lyons, director of conservation science with the National Audubon Society’s Seabird Institute, described being in the Pribilof Islands and watching clouds of auklets return to their colonies in the evening — “tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of birds in the air at a given time.”
He said officials were correct to take the alleged sighting of a rat on St. Paul so seriously. He praised the largely Alaska Native communities in the Pribilofs for their efforts to keep invasive species out.
“It’s just the abundance of wildlife that we hear stories or read historical accounts of, but really seldom see in kind of our modern age,” he said. “And so it really is a place where I’ve felt the wonder, the spectacle of nature.”