Several species of cord grass grow on the island and provide a habitat for various animals. In 1997, a study discovered that the native cord grass, Sporobolus foliosus, was being displaced on Hooks Island by the invasive species Spartina alterniflora, which tends to grow in denser stands than the native grass; this "makes it harder for animals to move around".[7]
The S. alterniflora, originally introduced to the area in 1973 by an Army Corps of Engineers project to control erosion and restore marshes in the Bay, hybridized with native cord grasses, forming dense growth above ground and a dense root system below; this displaced both surface-dwelling animals and those which lived beneath the mud.[8]
When the 1973 attempt to reverse damage to the marshes was eventually found to be harmful for wildlife, it was itself reversed—the California Coastal Conservancy's San Francisco Estuary Invasive Spartina Project was able, with the aid of the herbicide imazapyr as well as physical removal methods, to heavily reduce the overall footprint of S. alterniflora growth across a 70,000-acre (28,000 ha) "work area", from 805 acres (326 ha) in 2005 to 28 acres (11 ha) in 2016 (at which point $30 million had been spent).[8] According to the manager of the manager of the San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge Complex, the project was a "resounding success".[8]
Despite the success of the project, however, federal officials required the conservancy to reverse part of their reversal of the initial reversal, after it was found that the (then-endangered) California clapper rail had taken up residence in thickets of the invasive species.[8][9]
Fauna
Numerous birds have been known to live on Hooks Island, such as the near-threatened California clapper rail.[10] In 2011, a Point Reyes Bird Observatory Conservation Science report found that approximately 14 clapper rails had been found in the Baylands, and 19 clapper rails were "known to exist" at Palo Alto Harbor and Hooks Island.[11] Other estimates of the total Baylands population in 2011 included "approximately 15–29 individuals".[2] However, in 2010, there had been as many as 22 clapper rails.[11]
In 2013, allegations were made that feral cats were living on Hooks Island and killing the clapper rails.[11] While it is broadly accepted that there are many cats in the San Francisco Bay Area,[12] the extent of their presence in the Palo Alto Baylands (and of their role in the killing of clapper rails) was disputed. While the city's division manager of open space, parks and golf claimed to have "personally seen feral cats hunt and catch birds in the Baylands Nature Preserve", a volunteer at the Palo Alto Humane Society offered a rejoinder to this claim, stating that "compared to people, the damage feral cats do is minor".[11]
^ abPetra Unger; Diana Edwards (December 2017). Palo Alto Baylands: Existing Conditions (Report). AECOM, 2020 L Street, Suite 400, Sacramento, CA 95811. Archived from the original on 16 September 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
^ ab"San Francisco Bay Area Water Trail: Site Description for Palo Alto Baylands Sailing Station"(PDF). California State Coastal Conservancy. 29 May 2012. Archived(PDF) from the original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2020. Boat users need to be sensitive to wildlife, high tide refugia, and marsh habitat, observe buffer distances, and not land in any location besides the Sailing Station, including Hooks Island, located across from the Sailing Station. Additionally, there are areas located nearby where a boater who lands inappropriately could disturb nesting Western burrowing owls (Mountain View) or Western snowy plovers (Alviso or Ravenswood). The City of Palo Alto Municipal Code prohibits trampling vegetation and/or harassing wildlife and non‐permitted activities in the marsh constitute violations and are subject to fines of $1,000 or more
^"GNIS Detail – Hooks Point". U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System. 9 April 1999. Archived from the original on 7 October 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020.