In the past, at least according to
fossil records, it appears that the poouli inhabited the drier half of the island of
Maui, across the southwestern slope of
Haleakalā, at altitudes of . Fossils show that the poouli once lived at Maui's lower elevations in more arid environments, thriving on a presumed diet of native tree snails, invertebrates, insects and their larvae. The relatively recent arrival of lethal,
mosquito-transmitted
avian malaria in Hawaii quickly wiped out the low-elevation birds, forcing a rapid relocation, en masse, to higher elevations and mountain rainforests; this move showed a likely avoidance of mosquitoes by the birds. Moving to higher elevations also meant adjusting their diets, coming to avoid flying insects and focus on mollusks and other invertebrates. Overall, the sharp decrease in numbers (and subsequent relocation of survivors) negatively affected the poouli's once-thriving existence, their genetic diversity and population growth, reproduction and overall distribution. When the species was first discovered, 100–200 poo-uli were estimated to exist. There were only 76 birds per km2. By 1981, there were only 15 birds per km2. By 1985, there were only 8 per km2: from 1975 (when it was first discovered) to 1985, only ten years later, the population had dropped by over 90 percent. In the 1980s, the poo-uli disappeared from the easternmost part of its range and was only found in the western branch of the Hanawi Stream. To preserve the poo-uli and other endangered fauna and flora, the State of Hawaii established the
Hanawi Natural Area Reserve. This connected several protected areas to make one larger protective area. This protection effort was only possible due to the work of several groups: the government,
Maui County, the
National Park Service,
The Nature Conservancy, and several private companies. The land was fenced off and by June 1996 they began to clear out the pigs from the closed areas. Four years and 202 pigs later, the poo-uli pen was completely cleared of pigs. As more pigs were removed from the other two pens, the population of native species that lived there, e.g. the
Maui parrotbill and
ʻākohekohe, rose slightly faster than they otherwise would have. Rats, cats, and goats were still being removed from the poo-uli pen. By 1997, only three individuals were known to exist. These had home ranges within the Hanawi Natural Area Reserve and the adjacent
Haleakala National Park. In 2002, one of these, a female, was captured and taken to a male's home range in an attempt to get them to breed. The female, however, had flown back to her own territory, which was away, by the next day. There was also a ten-day expedition in 2004. The goal was to capture the three birds and bring them to a conservation center on the island, with the hopes that they would produce captive-bred offspring. On September 9, 2004, one of the remaining birds, a male, was captured and taken to the Maui Bird Conservation Center in
Olinda, in an attempt to breed the bird in captivity. However, biologists could not find a mate for the male before it died, around two months later, on November 26, 2004. It is uncertain whether the other two birds that remained at the time were a male and female, or two of the same sex. Since 2004, extensive surveys failed to locate these or any other individual poouli, indicating a possible extinction. However, they remained listed as
critically endangered by
BirdLife International (and thereby the
IUCN) until additional surveys had confirmed extinction beyond a reasonable doubt. Tissue samples were taken from the male captured in 2004 for possible future cloning. The
San Diego Zoo in
California retains potentially viable poouli genetic material at their research center, the
Frozen Zoo. The poouli's dramatic population decline has been attributed to a number of factors;
habitat loss from human activities, mosquito-transmitted disease, native habitat degradation caused by introduced
Indian axis deer, predation by feral
pigs,
rats,
cats, and especially the
small Asian mongoose have all contributed. An overall decline in the native tree snails (due to many of the same factors) that the poouli relied on for food has also been a leading cause in their disappearance. In 2019, after continued habitat degradation, presence of disease and invasive species, and a long period with no sightings, the IUCN classified the poouli as
extinct. == See also ==