The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Loss and hope: US park rangers’ climate crisis fight

- Lucy Aubourg

INDIANA DUNES NATIONAL PARK AND GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, United States: American biologist Laura Brennan describes the coin-sized Karner blue butterfly as “very delicate and graceful” with a “lovely blue” coloring and “just a little speckling of orange.”

The species, declared endangered in 1992, used to flourish in Indiana Dunes National Park, where Brennan has worked for two decades.

But the butterfly is now believed to have disappeare­d entirely from the midwestern US park – becoming a victim of rising temperatur­es fueled by human activity, among other stressors.

Brennan and thousands of others in the National Park Service (NPS) are witnessing firsthand the consequenc­es of the climate crisis and struggling to mitigate its impacts.

In picturesqu­e Glacier National Park, near the USCanada border in Montana, biologist Dawn LaFleur is working to save an at-risk pine species.

“Pretty much everything we do is in light of climate change,” she told AFP.

Some battles, like hers, seem winnable. Others are already lost.

In Indiana, the Karner blue butterfly (Plebejus samuelis) is the first known endangered species to have disappeare­d from an American national park due to global warming.

Though they remain in other places, their loss in the park was “heartbreak­ing” and “incredibly scary,” Brennan told AFP.

It’s “terrifying to know how fragile these systems are, and how interconne­cted everything is, and how little control we have,” she said.

‘Nothing to eat’

John Gross with the NPS climate change response program told AFP that witnessing the crisis impacts “is hugely emotional” for park rangers.

“It’s not a career for many people. It’s a way of life,” he said, explaining that many employees are the second or third generation in their families to work at the parks.

“So they’re very connected to their resources and their parks and care very deeply about it.”

Brennan grew up just a few hours from the Indiana Dunes site, which lies along Lake Michigan, some 40 miles (65 kilometers) east of Chicago.

In 2012, her beloved butterflie­s fell victim to what scientists call a “phenologic­al mismatch.”

Due to unusually warm springtime weather, the butterfly larvae emerged ahead of their plant food source, lupine.

“Plants are more reliant on soil temperatur­es, whereas

It’s not a career for many people. It’s a way of life. So they’re very connected to their resources and their parks and care very deeply about it

John Gross

insects are more reliant on the air temperatur­es” for seasonal transition­s, she explained.

Once emerged, the larvae “have nothing to eat,” she said.

“That was the beginning of the end of the Karner story here at Indiana Dunes National Park.”

Strenuous efforts were made to restore the butterfly habitat – as lupines need ample light to grow, major clearing operations were launched, but to no avail.

Models and research on how to make lands more “resilient” against climate change need to be ramped up, she said.

“We need the ability to remove those stressors faster.”

Genetic selection

In Montana, the whitebark pine has been threatened for years by an invasive fungus known as blister rust, but is increasing­ly threatened by drought due to early snowmelts and changing weather patterns.

Declared endangered, the trees grow only in the western United States and Canada, and at high altitudes that are particular­ly sensitive to global warming.

With rising temperatur­es, mountain pine beetles also risk spreading to those higher altitudes, where they would then attack whitebark pines.

Saving the pines is essential, as their seeds provide food for many species, including grizzly bears and the Clark’s nutcracker bird.

For over 20 years, some 1,000 whitebark pines have been replanted every year in Glacier National Park – a difficult task due to the park’s mountainou­s terrain.

The seeds are chosen after genetic testing for blister rust resistance, and increasing­ly for drought resistance, LaFleur said.

Having worked in the park for over three decades, she said the work can sometimes leave her feeling “overwhelme­d.”

“The more we spend in these environmen­ts, we realize how fragile they are in terms of the changes being wrought by climate change,” she said.

Nonetheles­s, LaFleur said she remains hopeful about saving the pines.

“We can’t change how hot and dry it gets in the summer now, for extended periods of time, we can’t control that,” she said philosophi­cally.

“So it’s more coming up with solutions to be able to adapt and direct our resources... to be able to really address what things we have control over and make a difference that way.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Combinatio­n of aerial photo shows Indiana Dunes National Park and Lake Michigan near Porter, Indiana.
— AFP photos Combinatio­n of aerial photo shows Indiana Dunes National Park and Lake Michigan near Porter, Indiana.
 ?? ?? Little Whitebark Pines ready to be replanted, in Glacier National. In picturesqu­e Glacier National Park, near the USCanada border in Montana, biologist Dawn LaFleur is working to save an at-risk pine species.
Little Whitebark Pines ready to be replanted, in Glacier National. In picturesqu­e Glacier National Park, near the USCanada border in Montana, biologist Dawn LaFleur is working to save an at-risk pine species.
 ?? ?? The Jackson Glacier, which has shrunk 40 per cent from 128 hectares down to 76 hectares as of 2015, viewed from the Jackson Glacier Overlook in Glacier National Park, Montana.
The Jackson Glacier, which has shrunk 40 per cent from 128 hectares down to 76 hectares as of 2015, viewed from the Jackson Glacier Overlook in Glacier National Park, Montana.
 ?? ?? This aerial photo shows Indiana Dunes National Park near Porter, Indiana.
This aerial photo shows Indiana Dunes National Park near Porter, Indiana.
 ?? ?? Geologist Laura Brennan poses in Indiana Dunes National Park in Indiana.
Geologist Laura Brennan poses in Indiana Dunes National Park in Indiana.
 ?? ?? Biologist and vegetation program manager Dawn LaFleur in the plant nursery of Glacier National Park. “Pretty much everything we do is in light of climate change,” she told AFP.
Biologist and vegetation program manager Dawn LaFleur in the plant nursery of Glacier National Park. “Pretty much everything we do is in light of climate change,” she told AFP.

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