Dubai Telegraph - Single heat wave wiped out millions of Alaska's dominant seabird

EUR -
AED 3.854745
AFN 73.183226
ALL 98.244651
AMD 412.673601
ANG 1.892643
AOA 957.533464
ARS 1068.641038
AUD 1.646002
AWG 1.889069
AZN 1.801399
BAM 1.955731
BBD 2.120424
BDT 125.505559
BGN 1.953508
BHD 0.395667
BIF 3104.001437
BMD 1.049483
BND 1.411669
BOB 7.256605
BRL 6.331744
BSD 1.050113
BTN 89.101753
BWP 14.182228
BYN 3.436682
BYR 20569.864144
BZD 2.116865
CAD 1.490051
CDF 3012.016006
CHF 0.933767
CLF 0.037145
CLP 1024.95646
CNY 7.628666
CNH 7.635759
COP 4562.070527
CRC 528.956082
CUC 1.049483
CUP 27.811296
CVE 110.262149
CZK 25.060626
DJF 186.513971
DKK 7.457803
DOP 63.664108
DZD 140.355733
EGP 53.352774
ERN 15.742243
ETB 133.400366
FJD 2.431128
FKP 0.828375
GBP 0.826687
GEL 2.949557
GGP 0.828375
GHS 15.385162
GIP 0.828375
GMD 75.562586
GNF 9062.765672
GTQ 8.091328
GYD 219.715945
HKD 8.15932
HNL 26.633058
HRK 7.486233
HTG 137.407282
HUF 409.602696
IDR 16755.676095
ILS 3.764873
IMP 0.828375
INR 89.048831
IQD 1375.672674
IRR 44170.114319
ISK 146.077772
JEP 0.828375
JMD 164.054195
JOD 0.7444
JPY 159.906498
KES 136.002352
KGS 91.094432
KHR 4217.770378
KMF 489.190165
KPW 944.53418
KRW 1501.049111
KWD 0.322863
KYD 0.875144
KZT 549.160103
LAK 23005.528334
LBP 94044.780052
LKR 304.743409
LRD 188.507941
LSL 18.532961
LTL 3.09885
LVL 0.634822
LYD 5.129818
MAD 10.477529
MDL 19.176773
MGA 4961.682601
MKD 61.460793
MMK 3408.679406
MNT 3566.142717
MOP 8.411362
MRU 41.629527
MUR 49.283543
MVR 16.161577
MWK 1820.983511
MXN 21.204544
MYR 4.656559
MZN 67.064758
NAD 18.533314
NGN 1625.512279
NIO 38.648264
NOK 11.68578
NPR 142.562805
NZD 1.815699
OMR 0.404043
PAB 1.050133
PEN 3.913424
PGK 4.24985
PHP 61.171235
PKR 292.084898
PLN 4.271675
PYG 8215.70929
QAR 3.828565
RON 4.970458
RSD 116.922883
RUB 110.20045
RWF 1441.207806
SAR 3.943759
SBD 8.798397
SCR 14.784096
SDG 631.261215
SEK 11.532474
SGD 1.412578
SHP 0.828375
SLE 23.921251
SLL 22007.135897
SOS 600.144453
SRD 36.915511
STD 21722.176397
SVC 9.189762
SYP 2636.857033
SZL 18.536284
THB 35.619091
TJS 11.446968
TMT 3.683685
TND 3.315288
TOP 2.457995
TRY 36.620372
TTD 7.130408
TWD 34.136518
TZS 2492.52137
UAH 43.739769
UGX 3840.681119
USD 1.049483
UYU 46.258363
UZS 13505.264752
VES 51.861698
VND 26652.666826
VUV 124.596715
WST 2.929727
XAF 655.921291
XAG 0.033885
XAU 0.000391
XCD 2.83628
XDR 0.796926
XOF 655.94004
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.764231
ZAR 18.644478
ZMK 9446.608862
ZMW 29.011421
ZWL 337.933054
  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    24.55

    -0.33%

  • SCS

    -0.2600

    12.94

    -2.01%

  • BCC

    -2.6400

    139.84

    -1.89%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    30.15

    -0.6%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    37.56

    -0.48%

  • RBGPF

    0.4600

    60.96

    +0.75%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    66.94

    -0.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.22

    -0.29%

  • GSK

    -0.2800

    34.17

    -0.82%

  • NGG

    -0.6000

    59.47

    -1.01%

  • RIO

    -1.5300

    63.45

    -2.41%

  • RELX

    -0.0200

    47.32

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    7.35

    +0.95%

  • BCE

    -0.1600

    25.81

    -0.62%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.26

    -0.3%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    8.68

    -1.04%

Single heat wave wiped out millions of Alaska's dominant seabird
Single heat wave wiped out millions of Alaska's dominant seabird / Photo: BRIE DRUMMOND - US FISH & WILDLIFE SERVICE/AFP

Single heat wave wiped out millions of Alaska's dominant seabird

The common murre, a large black-and-white seabird native to northern waters, has become far less common in Alaska over the past decade due to the impacts of climate change.

Text size:

A study published Thursday in Science reveals that a record-breaking marine heat wave in the northeast Pacific from 2014 to 2016 triggered a catastrophic population collapse, wiping out four million birds -- about half the species in the region.

Strikingly, they have shown little signs of rebounding, suggesting long-term shifts in the food web that have locked the ecosystem into a troubling new equilibrium.

"There's a lot of talk about declines of species that are tied to changes in temperature, but in this case, it was not a long term result," lead author Heather Renner of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge told AFP.

"To our knowledge, this is the largest mortality event of any wildlife species reported during the modern era," she and her colleagues emphasized in their paper.

The finding triggers "alarm bells," Renner said in an interview, as human-caused climate change makes heat waves more frequent, intense, and longer-lasting.

- Emaciated Carcasses -

With their dapper, tuxedoed look, common murres are sometimes called the "penguins of the north."

Their slender wings power them across vast distances in search of food and make them expert divers. But even these hardy seabirds were no match for an unprecedented environmental catastrophe.

The largest marine heat wave ever recorded began in the late fall of 2014, spanning a massive swath of the northeast Pacific Ocean from California to Alaska.

It persisted for over two years, leaving devastation in its wake. During this time, some 62,000 emaciated murres washed ashore along the North American Pacific coastline -- dead or dying from starvation.

Experts point to two key reasons for the bird deaths: elevated ocean temperatures reduced both the quality and quantity of phytoplankton, impacting fish like herring, sardines, and anchovies -- the mainstay of the murre diet.

At the same time, warmer waters increased the energy demands of larger fish, such as salmon and Pacific cod, which compete with murres for the same prey.

"We knew then it was a big deal, but unfortunately, we couldn't really quantify the effects," explained Renner.

For years after the event, breeding colonies failed to produce chicks, complicating efforts to assess the full impact.

Earlier estimates pegged the number of deaths at around a million, but a more robust analysis -- drawing on data from 13 murre colonies -- revealed the toll was four times higher.

"It is just so much worse than we thought it was," Renner said of the new findings.

- Climate winners and losers -

The marine heat wave didn't just impact common murres. Pacific cod stocks collapsed, king salmon populations dwindled, and as many as 7,000 humpback whales perished.

Yet the crisis created an uneven playing field: some species emerged unscathed, while others even thrived.

Thick-billed murres, which often share nesting cliffs with common murres, were largely unaffected, possibly due to their more adaptable diet, Renner noted.

For common murres, however, the fallout lingers. Despite nearly a decade since the heat wave, their numbers show no sign of bouncing back -- and the losses may well be permanent.

Part of the reason lies in the long-term decline of some of their prey.

Another factor is murres' survival strategy relies on numbers: they aggregate in massive colonies to protect their eggs from opportunistic predators like eagles and gulls.

With their populations slashed, these birds have lost their critical safety buffer.

Still, Renner offered a glimmer of hope.

While addressing global warming is essential for curbing long-term climate change, conservation efforts can make a difference in the short term, she said.

Removing invasive species like foxes and rats from murre nesting islands could also provide the beleaguered birds with a fighting chance.

W.Zhang--DT