What's killing the seabirds? The mysterious West Coast dieoff.Kathleen Wolgemuth has long walked the beaches along Ocean Shores, Washington Ocean Shores is a city in Grays Harbor County, Washington state, United States. The population was 3,836 at the 2000 census. History The City of Ocean Shores occupies the Point Brown peninsula on the Washington coast. and has admired the Brandt's cormorants she sees swooping overhead. So when she spotted the feathery feath·er·y adj. 1. Covered with or consisting of feathers. 2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness. feath blob on the beach last May, she was excited--a dead Brandt's cormorant, up dose for the first time. She thought them handsome: big brown birds, bodies as long as a yardstick and wings a foot wider than that. Then she trudged a little farther. And saw another dead cormorant. Her excitement turned to dread. "I kept walking and I found a third one. I thought: 'Man, this is very strange'" says the volunteer bird surveyor. "I'm used to seeing them--but alive. Not dead. To me, it's a chilling thing that's going on." The sentiment is shared by many who keep watch on the seabirds and marine creatures of the Pacific coast. During the summer of 2005, some saw baby birds starve to death where they normally thrive. Some saw eggs abandoned by bird parents who seemed to know something about the environment that scientists themselves did not comprehend. Perhaps more than 100,000 seabirds of various species washed up on Pacific beaches from central California Central California can refer to one of several divisions or regions of the U.S state of California:
. "They were piling up at a time of year--spring and early summer--when generally aquatic birds like seabirds and marine mammals marine mammals mammals inhabiting the sea; generally taken to include the cetaceans (whales, porpoise, dolphin), the sirenians (sea-cows, including manatees and dugong) and the pinnipeds (the carnivores of the group, seals, sealions, walruses). should be at their peak [condition]" says Julia Parrish, a University of Washington biologist who directs the bird-survey program for which Wolgemuth volunteers: the Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team. "What was alarming to us was two things--first the sheer numbers, second the time of year." It's not just birds, either. Last summer saw a 35 to 45 percent drop in juvenile salmon surveyed off the coasts of Oregon, Washington and Canada's British Columbia, as compared with federal surveys for the previous six years. That drop "is bizarre to me" says Ed Casillas, Estuarine es·tu·a·rine adj. 1. Of, relating to, or found in an estuary. 2. Geology Formed or deposited in an estuary. Adj. 1. estuarine - of or relating to or found in estuaries estuarial and Ocean Ecology program manager at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and (NOAA NOAA abbr. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. NOAA - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; ) in Seattle. Even lower on the food chain, tiny plankton plankton: see marine biology. plankton Marine and freshwater organisms that, because they are unable to move or are too small or too weak to swim against water currents, exist in a drifting, floating state. plummeted; off Oregon, zoo-plankton numbers fell 75 percent in June as waters for several weeks rose five to seven degrees higher than usual before returning to normal. Scientists wonder: What happened? Will this coming spring and summer bring more surprises? This string of oddities has them questioning whether something basic has gone wrong in the natural world or whether they're seeing a fluke. Many are comparing notes and attending meetings with scientists across disciplines. What we do know is something weird happened with the weather last summer. And many scientists blame the bird deaths on a lack of food. They couldn't find adequate food during the crucial breeding period; long afterward, food rebounded (in some cases), but by then it was too late. Noisy, squawking anklets n. pl. 1. socks that reach just above the ankle. Noun 1. anklets - a sock that reaches just above the ankle bobbysock, bobbysocks, anklet , for example, got an ominous start to the breeding season by nesting in far fewer boxes than usual--120 instead of at least 400--on the Farallon Islands off San Francisco. To the astonishment of researchers, the birds en masse abandoned their eggs by mid-June, leaving their progeny to die. An abandonment on that scale is something "we have never observed before there, as the number of babies born totaled zero, zilch, nada," says Bill Sydeman, director of marine ecology for the Point Reyes Bird Observatory. "We don't understand why. We know that the auklets eat krill krill: see crustacean. krill Any member of the crustacean suborder Euphausiacea, comprising shrimplike animals that live in the open sea. The name also refers to the genus Euphausia within the suborder and sometimes to a single species, E. superba. ," he says, "and they eat a lot of it"--as much as 80 percent of their diet. Researchers surmise that the available krill had plunged. Which prompts the question: Why did krill drop in May? Krill eat even smaller things called diatoms diatoms a series of unicellular algae, microscopic in size, with cell walls containing silica. Members of the family Diatomaceae. Their remains accumulate as geological deposits and are mined. See diatomaceous earth. . Researchers think their numbers had fallen, too. By going backward further, step by step, ultimately one trigger stands out. Sydeman calls his favored culprit "the anomalous winds in May." Southwesterly south·west·er·ly adj. 1. Situated toward the southwest. 2. Coming or being from the southwest. south·west winds--not the normal northerly winds--flowed through western coastal areas last May, the effect of which is something like slamming the door shut at an all-you-can-eat smorgasbord. Normally, at this crucial time of year when seabirds are ready to breed and salmon have reached the Pacific Ocean ready for big meals, northerly winds push deep, cold ocean waters--and their resident krill and plankton--to the surface, making them easy pickings. This year, this "upwelling up·well·ing n. 1. The act or an instance of rising up from or as if from a lower source: an upwelling of emotion. 2. " came late, in July. "The birds were dead and the salmon were dead by then" says Bill Peterson, a NOAA oceanographer in Newport, Oregon. Perhaps only twice in 50 years has upwelling arrived late. "This is the latest it's ever been." "It all starts with the wind. If the wind isn't there," Peterson adds, "then we've got problems." Peterson organized a January 2006 meeting of scientists to explore what went wrong. Why did the northerly winds arrive late? What was the atmosphere doing to cause that? Ideally, they'd like to piece together warning signs to help predict any future repeats. It's not the only such meeting: Alarmed by a 47 percent decline in marine birds in Washington's Puget Sound since the 1970s, the nonprofit SeaDoc Society in September also convened regional scientists. The society pledged to finance three studies, including one on the impact of forage-fish availability on marine-bird decline. Global warming so far isn't blamed by scientists, though Peterson wonders: Is this what life with global warming will be like? The odd summer of 2005 must be repeated "something like 10 of the next 20 years" to "lend more weight to the notion that something has changed in coastal climate and that it may be linked to global warming," says Nate Mantua Mantua (măn`ch ə, –t ə), Ital. Mantova, city (1991 pop. 53,065), capital of Mantova prov. , a research scientist with
University of Washington's Climate Impacts Group.
"Global warming always hovers as a backdrop, but most people are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. the exact mechanism, and 'global warming' is just too broad," Sydeman adds. For now, Wolgemuth will be anxious to see what happens when spring approaches and it's time for her to comb the beaches of Ocean Shores in a hunt for dead seabirds. She's not the only one awaiting scientists' solution to the puzzle of 2005. "I guess we're just anxious to see what they find out," says Dave Sones, vice chair of the Makah Tribal Council, whose tribe owns Tatoosh Island at the extreme northwestern tip of the U.S. Only 35 percent of the island's breeding pairs of common murres produced a chick this year, down from the typical 85 to 90 percent. "There were a lot more chick deaths than ever before, which is difficult to watch," says Parrish, the biologist who monitors the Tatoosh murre murre (mör), common name for a group of diving birds of the same family as the auk and the puffin (family Alcidae) and including the guillemots. There are three species of murres, all about 18 in. (45 cm) long, brownish black above and white below. colony. "It's very difficult to watch anything die--especially if they're dying slowly ... I think most people would want to lend a helping hand" But, as a scientist, she must remind herself that her role isn't to save organisms. "Even if death is horrific, your job is to report accurately and sleuth out the factors that are creating this change. You have to grit your teeth a lot" CONTACT: Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team, (206) 221-6893, www. coasst.org; The SeaDoc Society, (206) 281-9987, www.seadocsociety.org. |
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