In the early
1900s, Desecheo NWR was still a major nesting ground for thousands of seabirds. Approximately 15,000
brown boobies, 2,000
red-footed boobies (
Sula sula), 2,000
brown noddies (
Anous stolidus), 1,500
bridled terns (
Onychoprion anaethetus), and hundreds of
magnificent frigatebirds (
Fregata magnificens),
laughing gulls (
Larus atricilla), and
sooty terns (
Onychoprion fuscatus) nested here. In response, in 2016 the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS),
Island Conservation, and other key partners, including the
US Department of Agriculture (USDA), and Bell Laboratories and Tomcat, worked together to remove invasive
black rats and
Rhesus macaques from the island. One year later Desecheo Island was declared free of invasive species, and signs of recovery were observed, including
Sargasso shearwaters sighted on the island for the first time and new bridled tern nests discovered. In addition, 72 Federally protected Higo Chumbo cactus, (
Harrisia portoricensis), were found and measured pre (2003–2010) and post eradication (2017). In 2017, individuals with flowers and huge yellow fruits were observed which is a good sign for the overall reproductive status of the population. Since 2018 social attraction equipment has been installed to augment
bridled tern and
brown noddy colonies and establish a species of conservation concern, the
Sargasso shearwater. In 2023, the first sargasso shearwater nest since mammal eradication was confirmed on the island. ==Diving==