Minnesota's third-largest great blue heron rookery, site of a remarkable comeback over the past decade, suffered a setback recently, possibly at the hands of the same culprits who threatened it before.
The island rookery on Peltier Lake in Lino Lakes had 253 active nests a year ago, but when a volunteer visited the site in January, he counted only 203.
Some of the decline might be due to natural causes, but officials also suspect a wily adversary: raccoons.
Peltier Lake herons thrived in the early 1990s, with more than 1,000 nests at their peak. In the early 2000s, the number dropped, falling to about 25 in 2005, a decline that long puzzled officials.
"There was some concern [that] boating traffic around the island was a disturbance," said Carrol Henderson, nongame wildlife supervisor for the state Department of Natural Resources. "Until Andy got the cameras we were totally baffled."
Andy was Andy Von Duyke, then a University of Minnesota graduate student who in 2004 installed and monitored surveillance cameras in the nest trees, with support from DNR funds and federal grants. Video showed raccoons appearing night after night in heron nests for snacks, wiping out all the chicks.
After the herons flew south for the winter that year, volunteers helped city and Anoka County workers install 3-foot-wide metal bands around the tree trunks. A no-wake zone around the island was also enforced.
Four chicks survived the next year, followed by 30 in 2006 and on up to 70 in 2011, as best as counters could tell. Nest numbers also improved.