A new
study says thousands of tufted puffins are dying because of climate change.
Posted:
May 29, 2019 12:00 PM
Updated:
May 29, 2019 3:15 PM
A new
study says thousands of tufted puffins are dying because of climate change.
Published
at: 2:39 PM, Thu May 30 2019
Tufted
puffins, those adorable black and white birds with big orange
beaks, experienced an unusual die-off in the Bering Sea in late 2016
through early 2017. Massive mortality events like this seem to be increasing,
likely because of climate change, according to a new study running in PLOS ONE.
Researchers
found over 350 carcasses on St. Paul Island in the Bering Sea, Alaska, between
October 2016 and January 2017. They estimate anywhere from 3,150 to 8,800 birds
died in that time period.
There was
no oil spill, nor was there any other dramatic catastrophic event. Scientists
think the birds died because they were starving. The adult bird bodies
scientists found were severely emaciated. While there were some strong winter
storms that kept the birds from foraging toward the end of the time period,
they think there is a bigger factor that was keeping the birds from eating --
climate change.
That's
because the puffins that live in the area typically dine on fish, but climate
change has significantly disrupted the food chain. The fish eat zooplankton,
but climate change has warmed the water in the area up so much that the
zooplankton and the fish have started to disappear. The seasonal ice cover in
the area has also started to melt, eliminating other potential food sources for
the birds. Many of the dead birds were molting, meaning they were regrowing their
feathers. When a bird goes through this process, it takes a lot of energy and
often cannot fly as far, or fly at all, making it even harder for them to get
to food.
There
have been mass die-offs of the birds before, in 1983 and 1997, that were linked
to climate-related food issues, but climate change will likely accelerate these
die-offs. Scientists who observed these die-offs will continue to monitor this
bird population.
The ocean
has been warming a lot faster than scientists originally
thought, according to previous research. Unless the birds can move or adapt,
puffins in the area may be in grave danger. Tufted puffins at a neighboring
island did not see the same die off according to the study. But with the
further predicted warming of the water, the increasing prevalence of harmful
algae blooms and increasing light levels that will continue to shrink sea ice,
climate change could significantly stress birds in this area.
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