BSS
  30 Jan 2022, 09:48

Mexican town hopes pelicans will help tourism take off

  PETATAN (ISLA DE PETATAN), Mexico, Jan 30, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - A town in
western Mexico where thousands of American white pelicans migrate is hoping
to turn the birds into a global tourist draw -- and recoup losses from the
Covid-19 pandemic.

  Petatan Island, located on Lake Chapala in Michoacan state, plays seasonal
host to the birds, which head south in search of warmth and food.

  Many locals note that the migration pattern is similar to the renowned
monarch butterfly and takes place at the same time of year -- between October
and April -- though they highlight the role they play in feeding these birds.

  "Petatan is an island of fishermen, the fishermen go to the lagoon, collect
the fish, extract the fillet and the bone... it is what serves as food when
the pelicans are in season," explains Ana Lilia Manso, mayor of Cojumatlan de
Regules, the town that includes Petatan.

  The community welcomes the American white pelicans' arrival, which attracts
tourists from nearby towns. They fill restaurants and pay for boat rides to
get an up-close look at the flocks that adopt this region as their home for
six months.

  "We want the pelican phenomenon to be known at the state level, nationwide
and around the world, because wherever you go they know the monarch butterfly
phenomenon, but the pelican phenomenon is a bit forgotten," says Manso.

  The birds, which can measure 1.75 meters (5.7 feet) long and up to three
meters wide with outstretched wings, are characterized by the yellow color of
their beaks and their white plumage.

  Enrique Martinez, who filets the fish that are caught in the lake,
estimates that daily they collect between one and two tonnes of backbones
that end up becoming a delicacy for the pelicans, even though the winter
months have the lowest volume of fishing.

  He stresses that the island's population takes care of the birds and cares
that they have food.

  "It doesn't bother us at all, we like having them here," says Martinez, 41.
But the town wants "people to come see them, so that there is more
publicity."

  Last year, Covid-19 forced the closure of the island of Petatan due to the
high number of infections and deaths, while this year a regional festival
scheduled for February was postponed due to the rebound in cases from the
Omicron variant.

  Yet Mayor Manso trusts that once the virus cases are under control, the
event can be held again.