Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 38 | Page 19

Carolina Department of Natural Resources, Felicia Sanders and Janet Thebault. They are among the most knowledgeable and experienced biologists in the Atlantic flyway, and they have succeeded with conservation against the odds. In my years as head of a state endangered species program, I have learned that successful conservation must be carefully nurtured even in times of good resources and political support. Most agencies have conflicting or shifting goals and priorities that can leave responsible biologists abandoned to their own resources, always keeping a constant vigil for the needs of the wildlife under their care. This is especially true in times like these when there is seemingly less focus on the welfare of wildlife. Then the job only gets worse. But Kiawah enjoys two dedicated state resource biologists standing ready to help craft a community stewardship project. Fortunately, the conservationists of Kiawah find themselves in the enviable position of working in a place with good ecological cheekbones and supportive resource agencies willing to provide guidance. So what can a concerned conservationist do for the shorebirds of Kiawah? In this effort our experience on the Delaware Bay helps. Here we have broken with traditional U.S. conservation because most of our group comes from England, mainland Europe, Australia, and other places where shorebird protection has taken place for SUMMER/FALL 2017 • VOLUME 38 decades. In the U.S. we would prefer that conservation to be the responsibility of the government. Our agencies are much larger than our counterparts in other countries, and at least in my experience, far less successful. Rather than pretend the government will provide wildlife a better place and allow the public only a minor role, they flip it around. The government gives local communities and the people who love wildlife the opportunity to ply their passion. In Delaware Bay most of the work is conducted by volunteers. Our scientific program, which includes trapping, counting, and re-sighting shorebirds, is led by paid staff, but mostly carried out by volunteers—some from the area, many from all over the world. And it works. Our data support some of the most advanced modeling and natural resource assessments in the world. This year we had a British couple with long experience in British shorebird work tell us they have never seen it done better in the U.K. High praise indeed. Our stewardship program includes protecting birds from disturbance, rescuing crabs from impingement, and outreach to the public on the need to keep their distance from feeding or roosting birds. It is entirely carried out by people who live in the area. The agencies provide lodging and expenses for our volunteers, but little more. Volunteers even provide the nighttime dinners, sometimes for up to 40 people. And the 17