Double-crested cormorants -- large, migratory, fish-eating birds that nest in colonies at this time of year -- have returned to the same island on Lake Waconia for years.
Not in 2012.
University of Minnesota researcher Linda Wires spotted only two of the protected birds when she flew over Coney Island late last month. That's down from 470 cormorant nests -- each with two birds -- in 2010 and 324 nests last year.
"I would have expected at least some to come back," said Wires, who since 2004 has been monitoring the 32-acre island in Carver County. "It's very odd."
Speculation is that sharpshooters hired in past years to legally reduce the bird's population -- long viewed as a nuisance by anglers who say they eat too many fish -- worked a little too well: More than 900 cormorants were shot in the past two years. Or that partygoers who sneaked onto the private island played loud music, set off fireworks or otherwise disturbed the birds.
Whatever the reason, some are just glad they're gone.
"Since we're not seeing the big [cormorant] flocks this year, the bait fish will be in better shape, they won't get eaten up by the birds, and I think it will be a good year for fishing on the lake," said Waconia City Councilman Jim Sanborn.
So many birds have nested in the area in recent years that more than 3,000 Waconia residents signed a petition asking that private landowners be allowed to shoot them. That prompted two Minnesota congressmen to introduce a bill, heard in committee in late March, to give the state more leeway in controlling the federally protected birds.