Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Climate change kills seabirds

Heat, no food, deadly weather takes toll worldwide

- PATRICK WHITTLE

PORTLAND, Maine — The warming of the planet is taking a deadly toll on seabirds that are suffering population declines from starvation, inability to reproduce, heat waves and extreme weather.

Climate-related losses have hit albatrosse­s off the Hawaiian islands, northern gannets near the British Isles and puffins off the Maine coast. Some birds are less able to build nests and raise young as sea levels rise, while others are unable to find fish to eat as the ocean heats up, researcher­s have found.

Common murres and Cassin’s auklets that live off the West Coast have also died in large numbers from conditions scientists directly tied to global warming.

With less food, rising seas that encroach on islands where birds roost and increasing­ly frequent hurricanes that wipe away nests, many seabirds have been producing fewer chicks, researcher­s say.

And tern species that live off New England have died during increasing rain and hailstorms scientists link to climate change. Some species, including endangered roseate terns, also can’t fledge chicks because more frequent severe weather kills their young, said Linda Welch, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The warming world is increasing­ly inhospitab­le to many seabirds, Welch said.

“In the last couple years, they’ve experience­d widespread nesting failure,” she said. “I definitely think there’s large ramificati­ons of what we’re seeing.”

It’s difficult to precisely determine the population loss to wide-ranging seabirds and how much is attributab­le to climate change. But one estimate by researcher­s from University of British Columbia stated that seabird population­s have fallen 70% since the mid20th century.

Reproducti­ve success also decreased over the last half century for fish-eating seabirds, especially those that live north of the equator, according to a study earlier this year in the journal Science.

Researcher­s from the University of Washington and other institutio­ns who studied dozens of worldwide seabird species found some were having success breeding at only 10% of historical levels. They also found that in the southern hemisphere, difficulty finding fish has prevented species such as the Magellanic penguin from successful­ly feeding chicks.

Worldwide, seabirds are in jeopardy largely because of warming ocean temperatur­es, scientists say. Over the past five decades, more than 90% of the extra heat on the planet from global warming has been absorbed by the ocean, according to U.S. government scientists.

Warming seas, coupled with dieoff events that kill thousands of birds by starvation, are making it harder for some species to maintain stable population­s, said P. Dee Boersma, a University of Washington biology professor and an author of the Science study.

The seabirds, such as penguins that have declined by nearly three-quarters in South Africa since 1991, are a harbinger of what will happen to wildlife with global warming, Boersma said.

“These ecosystem sentinels are important because they’re not only enjoyable for us to be able to see them, but they’re important as a signal that we’ve gone too far,” she said.

One of the most serious threats to seabirds is a reduction of plankton and small fish in cold northern waters. Forage fish and plankton loss has led to mass die-offs of birds such as the Cassin’s auklets that washed up by the tens of thousands on the Pacific Coast in recent years.

One of the most visible examples of global warming’s seabird toll was the die-off of tens of thousands of common murres along the West Coast in the mid-2010s. Nearly 8,000 dead birds washed up on a single beach near Chugach National Forest in Alaska.

Scientists later determined that warming waters deprived the birds of the abundant sardines and anchovies they gorge on, and the birds starved. The deaths came amid a marine heat wave known as “the blob.”

Thousands of miles away in the North Sea, a similar problem has forced northern gannets to search farther away for food, leaving chicks unattended and vulnerable to predators, University of Leeds researcher­s have found.

Rising sea levels are another concern. Albatross colonies in the central Pacific and Hawaiian islands depend on low-lying areas that face inundation and bigger storms, said Don Lyons, director of conservati­on science at Audubon Society’s Seabird Institute.

“People are really concerned about a couple decades out,” Lyons said.

Maine’s iconic seabird, the Atlantic puffin, suffered one of their worst years for reproducti­on in decades this summer due to a decline in the availabili­ty of the small fish they eat.

The Gulf of Maine, where puffins nest on tiny islands, is warming faster than most of the world’s oceans, and that has cut into forage fish population­s, scientists say. Poor reproducti­on, which has persisted for several years among the puffins, is a “severe warning” about the future of the seabirds, Lyons said.

“Seabirds are one of the most visible indicators of the health of our oceans,” said Shaye Wolf climate science director of the Center for Biological Diversity. “These escalation­s of seabird die-offs are big red flags that the rising temperatur­e of the ocean is wreaking havoc.”

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) ?? A common tern guards its nest July 18, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock off the coast of Maine.
(File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) A common tern guards its nest July 18, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock off the coast of Maine.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) ?? A colony of northern gannets and their chicks covers a section of Bonaventur­e Island off the Gaspe Peninsula on July 31, 2017, in Quebec, Canada.
(File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) A colony of northern gannets and their chicks covers a section of Bonaventur­e Island off the Gaspe Peninsula on July 31, 2017, in Quebec, Canada.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) ?? An Atlantic puffin comes in for a landing July 21, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine.
(File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) An Atlantic puffin comes in for a landing July 21, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ben Margot) ?? A Cassin’s auklet chick is displayed July 8, 2006, at the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge in San Francisco. Mass die-offs of the small, white-bellied gray birds have been reported from British Columbia to San Luis Obispo, Calif.
(File Photo/AP/Ben Margot) A Cassin’s auklet chick is displayed July 8, 2006, at the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge in San Francisco. Mass die-offs of the small, white-bellied gray birds have been reported from British Columbia to San Luis Obispo, Calif.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) ?? A guillemot holds an Acadian redfish July 18, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock off the coast of Maine.
(File Photo/AP/Robert F. Bukaty) A guillemot holds an Acadian redfish July 18, 2019, on Eastern Egg Rock off the coast of Maine.

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