Royal Tern (Thalasseus maximus), family Laridae, order Charadriiformes, East Coast of the U.S.
photograph by Peter Brannon

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Royal Tern (Thalasseus maximus), family Laridae, order Charadriiformes, East Coast of the U.S.
photograph by Peter Brannon
Royal Terns (nonbreeding plumage) (Thalasseus maximus) - (c) SaritaWolf - please do not repost
An elegant tern (Thalasseus elegans) feeds its offspring a fish in Morro Bay, California, USA
by marlin harms
Crested tern (Thalasseus) runoff
Which is the best bird?
Sandwich tern
Cabot's tern
Royal tern
sandwich terns (thalasseus sandvicensis), ireland
Sandwich Tern
Elegant tern (Thalasseus elegans)
Photo by Michael Daniel Ho
Asia’s rarest seabird could be easier to spot in the future | BirdLife
You see it’s tough being naturally sociable when there’s no-one left to hang around with. The Chinese Crested Tern is a very gregarious species, relying on the presence of a large colony to feel comfortable enough to breed successfully. Late-breeders will even desert their nests if the colony starts to disperse, according to close observation by BirdLife’s Simba Chan, Senior Conservation Officer of BirdLife Asia Division and National Geographic Explorer, when he dedicated two breeding seasons in 2014 and 2015 carefully camped out (relying on shipment of food and water, and braving a typhoon) on the Jiushan Islands (off the coast of Zhejiang, southeast China [see map below]) in order to protect newly-found Chinese Crested Terns there (amongst Greater Crested) from disturbance. The 2016 discovery in South Korea also indicates that Chinese Crested Terns there are breeding earlier than normal in order to match the breeding times of the Black-tailed Gulls.
The key, therefore, to the conservation of Chinese Crested Terns is increasing nesting success by making the birds feel safe. This is achieved through preventing disturbance and by using social attraction techniques, such as using model decoy birds and call-playback systems to bolster the colony. Almost three years later, this kind of direct conservation effort is paying off in South Korea: this breeding season seven Chinese Crested Terns were monitored at the South Korean island, with at least one chick fledged.
Social attraction techniques were developed by Dr. Stephen Kress (Vice President for Bird Conservation, National Audubon Society [BirdLife USA]) for the restoration of Puffin colonies in the USA in 1970s, and has proven to be effective in restoring colonial seabird breeding sites. Since 2013, the adaptation of these techniques by Chan and colleagues has successfully restored the deserted Chinese Crested Tern breeding colony of the Jiushan Islands, leading to a record-breaking number of Chinese Crested Terns being found there (over 50!) during Chan’s protective stake-out seasons, doubling the known population at the time. This shows that the islands along the eastern China coast were highly disturbed (and perhaps even exploited) and so the terns congregated on the one island that had been made safe. Chan then recommended the use of social attraction to help the South Korean birds.
“I am pleased that social attraction methods have helped Chinese Crested Terns establish new colonies” said Dr. Kress. “This is good news for the species. Multiple nesting colonies within an expanded range reduces the risk of having most of the population in one location. Because each site brings its own risk to the species, multiple sites help to assure that some of the population will survive regardless of what happens at other colonies.”
"Exploitation and disturbance by humans are the main reasons for the failure of breeding," says Chan, "and I believe pollution is the main reason for embryos dying before hatching.” But there’s hope: “Unlike the southern breeding grounds, the coast of southwestern Korea is safe from human disturbance because the site is well-guarded. The pollution level is much lower too so it’s an ideal place for Chinese Crested Terns. Other potential risks, such as typhoons and hybridisation with Greater Crested Terns, will also be negligible at the site in Korea.”