Warmer waters off the coast of California are likely driving away sea lions’ prey such as squid, anchovies, and sardines,
said Justin Viezbicke, stranding services coordinator for the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). As a result, mother sea
lions are having to go further from birthing grounds — usually around
the Channel Islands
— to forage for food, meaning that pups probably don’t get enough
nutrients from their mothers when they return. The pups then wean off
their mothers earlier and are underweight when they leave the island,
likely to find food of their own.
“They’re leaving with a low tank of gas and there’s really not much
out there to help them out,” said Viezbicke. “They’re jumping into … a
challenging environment and then they’re ending up washing ashore on the
mainland, starving.”
Organizations like NOAA and other animal rescue programs have been
taking in pups and feeding them — but that’s only a stopgap measure.
“This is something that’s naturally occurring out there, so there’s
really not much we can do other than watch and learn from the
situation,” Viezbicke said. “We can’t really prevent or stop it,
unfortunately.”
Left to their own devices, these stranded sea lion pups probably
wouldn’t make it. (No judgement if you need a tissue here. I’ll wait.)
As sad as it sounds, starvation events and mass mortality events (in
which vast numbers of animals die), are becoming more and more common in
this wacky, warming world. Thanks to a number of large-scale, systemic
alterations (lookin’ at you, El NiƱo and warming ocean temps), the world’s ecosystems hang in a delicate balance.
Meet the Cassin auklet — a pudgy, fist-sized seabird with crescent-shaped eye markings and pale blue feet. They’re pretty dang cute. And thousands of them are washing up dead along the West Coast — all the way from Northern California to British Columbia.
“My volunteers alone … have found 7,000 carcasses [over the last four
months],” said Julia Parrish, executive director of the Coastal
Observation and Seabird Survey Team (COASST) at the University of
Washington. “It’s a scary big number.”
Like the sea lions, auklets are literally dying for a meal. The birds
primarily feed on zooplankton or krill. However, in the last year, a
mass of warm water — very scientifically named “the blob” — drove the
usual Pacific krill into deeper waters and brought in a host of
zooplankton that the auklets don’t eat, reported Audubon Magazine.
When a high number of birds wash ashore dead, the events are called
“wrecks.” Generally speaking, smaller wrecks are fairly normal, Parrish
explained. If there’s a storm out at sea, it’s not unusual for seabirds
caught in its path to die, whether from starvation or storm conditions,
and later wash up on beaches. That’s just how it goes.
But this time, something is different. “This is the biggest wreck
we’ve ever seen in the 16 years we’ve been doing this work,” Parrish
said. “I think it’s probably the largest wreck we’ve seen on West Coast …
That makes me sit up and take notice.”
This winter’s wreck could be especially bad if enough of the dead
auklets turn out to be adults, because an entire reproductive group may
have been wiped out. They won’t know for sure until the birds return to
their breeding grounds. Until then, it’s a lot of waiting and counting
dead birds.
So is this climate change at play? Scientists are hesitant to say.
Dee Boersma, a conservation scientist and founder of the Penguin Sentinels Project
at UW, compares the vulnerability of seabirds to weather and climate to
the vulnerability of a human crossing a busy street: You could
get hit by a truck, but it doesn’t happen every time. And just as it’s
hard to predict exactly how likely you are to survive a street-crossing
as a human, the same goes for storms and their effects on Magellanic penguins, she said.
In 2014, Boersma and other penguin researchers published a study in PLOS ONE which found that climate change was directly responsible for the deaths of more than 200 Magellanic penguin chicks from 1983 to 2010 in Punta Tombo,
Argentina. There, climate change is increasing the intensity and
frequency of storms, while lowering the reproductive success of
Magellanic penguins, the study reported.
During the 27-year-long study, young penguins perished at a high rate
due to a combination of starvation and overexposure during
exceptionally rainy and hot seasons. The chicks’ feather coats keep them
cozy when they are dry, but that changes when they get wet: The fluffy
down isn’t waterproof, like adult penguin feathers. So if a penguin
chick gets caught in the rain during a storm, it’s like a human “being
stuck outside and naked in a wet sleeping bag … the penguins basically
die of hypothermia like you or I would,” said Boersma.
Plus, a lack of food leaves the chicks unprepared to cool themselves
down when things heat up, since they rely on the food their parents
bring them for all of their water. Without adequate hydration, the
chicks can’t depend on evaporation to keep cool and become vulnerable to
heat stress.
It’s a lethal combination: Over the course of the study, an average
of 65 percent of the Punta Tombo chicks died every year, with about 40
percent dying of starvation. So what was that about climate change
again? Mass animal die-offs and starvation epidemics are shocking no
matter what, even to hardened scientists. Climate change is just
exacerbating these kinds of things.
“The fact is that we have populations responding to warming events,
whether the warming is temporary or inexorable,” said Parrish, the
researcher studying the dying auks.
The world’s ecosystems are hanging on as best they can, but small
things can throw them out of balance. It’s unfair to compare the
temperatures that a wild ecosystem can withstand to the temperatures
humans can, because we have tools and technology on our side. “Wildlife
needs habitat,” Parrish said. “In today’s crowded world, habitat only
exists in certain places — places that we protect. And when the climate
warms, those places change.”
“[Even one degree] is a huge deal,” Parrish points out. To understand
and support conservation efforts, humans need to “think like a fish, a
clam, or an oyster, and not like a person.”
Guess it’s time to get in touch with your inner oyster or auklet — getting hungry yet?
17 March 2015 By Rebecca MorelleScience Correspondent, BBC News
A penguin's waddle is one of nature's weirdest walks
"Come on Puddle… You can do it!" yells Prof John Hutchinson.
Puddle - a Humboldt penguin - seems more than a little bemused.
And with good reason.
***
A team of scientists have come
to Penguin Beach at London Zoo, installed a hi-tech track and are now
trying to lure Puddle and his penguin pals across it.
"Go Puddle, go!" encourages Prof Hutchinson, from the Royal Veterinary College (RVC).
And at last - with a fishy treat to help him along the way - the little bird waddles along the runway.
It is this distinctive walk that scientists from RVC and University of Texas at Austin are here to study.
Beneath the track lie force plates loaded with sensors, which allow the researchers to analyse how these birds get around.
"Penguins move in a really weird way," explains Prof Hutchinson.
"They have a very upright posture like a human, but they also have very short, crouched legs - it is very comical."Prof John Hutchinson on the eccentricity of the penguin's walk
He adds: "But when I see an animal do something weird, as an
evolutionary biologist, I want to know how that evolved, how it got that
way.
"And with these experiments, we're trying to tie what we know about penguin evolution with penguin physics."
Foot swing
Previous studies of the penguin's ungainly gait have revealed
that the waddle is in fact the most energy efficient way for them to
get about on land.
But these experiments will reveal exactly how they are doing this.
"They are applying forces left and right as they swing their bodies from side to side," says Prof Hutchinson.
"But what is not known about penguins is how the legs do
that, how big are the sideways forces on penguin legs and how that
compares to other waddling birds.
"And that's why we need these force platforms to measure the forces in the legs individually."
The Waimanu is one of the oldest penguins discovered - and most likely had a more horizontal posture
But it turns out that penguins didn't always waddle. Fossils reveal that their ancient ancestors moved in a different way.
"We have all kinds of fossils as far back as 60 million years
ago from the Southern Hemisphere," says palaeobiologist James Proffitt,
who has come from Texas to study the birds.
"That gives us a chance to
understand how these unusual anatomies and behaviours have evolved in
deep time and how we have all these bizarre things we see today."
The bird bones show that the first penguins were a varied
bunch: some were tiny, but others grew as tall as humans, hunting large
fish with their spear-like beaks.
James Proffitt is particularly interested in a genus of penguins known as Waimanu.
These birds, unearthed in New Zealand, are the oldest-known penguins, living between 58-60 million years ago.
Mr Proffitt explains: "We know that penguins such as Waimanu were also flightless, wing-propelled divers based on things like their wing proportions and their relative size.
"But in many ways they were different, and they probably
moved about differently on land based on the anatomy of their legs and
hip bones."
The team believes that these proto-penguins had a more
horizontal posture, and their walk would have looked similar to that of a
modern-day albatross.
Today's penguins most likely evolved their unusual anatomy
and resulting waddle as they became better and better adapted to
swimming.
As their body shape changed to help them fly through the water with ease, they became more and more clumsy on land.
Penguins use their wings to fly through the water
Back at the running track, and the penguins seem to be enjoying not quite doing what they are told.
But Zuzana Matyasova, London Zoo's deputy team leader for the bird department, has found a way to attract their attention.
A combination of some dangling string, a tennis ball on a stick - or some fish - is proving hard for some penguins to resist.
"Some of the youngsters are really inquisitive: anything new
in their enclosure is almost like a challenge and they want to be the
first ones to try it out," she explains.
She's hoping all this hard work will shed light on these birds.
"I work with them every day, and I wonder about their way of moving - their distinctive waddle is just amazing."
While not every bird fancies taking a waddle down the runway,
after several days, the scientists manage to collect enough data to
begin their analysis.
And by comparing this with their studies of ancient penguins,
they hope to establish how and when one of nature's most distinctive
walks evolved.
Bones left behind by a penguin that was eaten to extinction reveal that
a remarkably fast turnover in species occurred after Polynesian
seafarers wiped out New Zealand's weird wildlife, a new study reports.
Archaeological evidence has already confirmed the first humans to arrive in New Zealand treated the islands like a giant buffet.
Seals and sea lions were on the menu, but the main course was giant
birds. With no land mammals present in the area before humans arrived,
birds ruled the islands, with a huge predatory eagle at the top of the
food chain.
The first Pacific Islanders arrived in the late 13th century, and
within 200 years, about 40 percent of the islands' bird species had
vanished, studies show. Rats traveling with the settlers drove the
extinction of smaller bird species, while human hunters vanquished the
megafauna, including the nine species of large, flightless moa.
Similar species soon claimed the abandoned habitat, researchers are now
finding. New DNA evidence and radiocarbon dating of penguin bones and
fossils show the replacements arrived remarkably fast.
"These extinctions
and recolonizations are quite a unique thing in the fossil record, and
the speed is quite unique as well," said lead study author Nic Rawlence,
a paleoecologist at the University of Otago in New Zealand.
According to the new study, the waitaha penguin went extinct in about
1487, Rawlence said. Within 20 to 30 years, yellow-eyed penguins had
started colonizing the waitaha's coastal niches. By the time Europeans
arrived in the 1800s, the yellow-eyed penguins had completely taken over
the southeast coast on New Zealand's South Island.
Rawlence said he suspects that yellow-eyed penguins
were always washing up in New Zealand, but could never establish a
population because the waitaha penguins outcompeted them. Although the
yellow-eyed penguin is an endangered species today, with only about
7,000 individuals alive, they have a wide range centered on the Campbell
and Auckland islands near Antarctica.
"The population [in the 1500s] would have been quite healthy to produce
a lot of vagrants to come to New Zealand," Rawlence said.
But how did the interlopers survive the hunters?
It turns out that people on the South Island nearly went extinct from
their own voracious appetites. The human population crashed around 1500 ,
and the Polynesian-Maori people
abandoned the southern third of that island. At the same time, the
humans changed their diet. Instead of subsisting on food from the land,
they got most of their protein from fish and shellfish.
"What we think changed is all the big animals were killed off,"
Rawlence said. The islanders then retreated north because sweet
potatoes, a staple food, can't grow south of what is now Christchurch,
he said.
But even without human pressure, the yellow-eyed penguins, which are
adapted to a colder climate, never took over the wide swaths of beach
previously inhabited by the waitaha penguin.
Rawlence and his colleagues are now studying the population patterns of
other species to look at the influence of hunting, habitat destruction
and climate on New Zealand's lost creatures. The research was published Feb. 9 in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews.
Emperor penguins are adapted to the bitter cold of Antarctica,
but a new study reveals that during the last ice age it got too cold
even for them.
Emperor penguins are truly remarkable birds – they thrive
in the coldest environment on Earth and live year-round on the ice.
Breeding colonies congregate on sea ice during the Antarctic winter and
must withstand temperatures that regularly drop below -30C.
In fact, emperor penguins are so adapted to cold conditions that they
become heat stressed when temperatures climb above 0C. Emperor penguins
are therefore particularly threatened by climate change, and their
numbers are expected to decline in the coming decades.
However a new study, published today in Global Change Biology, shows that it was once too cold even for emperor penguins.
Penguins past and present
In our study of how changing climate has affected emperor penguins
over the past 30,000 years we found that, during the last ice age,
emperor penguins were roughly seven times less common than today. What’s
more, it appears that only three populations survived the last ice age.
The Ross Sea was a refuge for one of these populations.
In the first continental-scale genetic study of emperor penguins, we
examined genetic diversity of penguins modern and ancient to find out
how they’re related. We collected genetic samples from eight breeding
colonies – no easy feat given that emperor penguins live in some of the
remotest places on Earth in conditions that would send most people
running for a roaring fire and a hot cup of tea.
Reaching the colonies involved weeks on the notoriously wild Southern
Ocean (and considerable seasickness), helicopter journeys over pristine
expanses of sea ice, and long snow shoe and ski traverses. The “A” (for
Antarctic) factor was a constant presence, with delays caused by heavy
sea ice that trapped ships for days at a time and blizzards that
grounded helicopters.
Nevertheless, the effort paid off. Analyses of genetic data allowed
us to reconstruct the population history of penguins, and correlate it
with environmental conditions inferred from ice core data. The findings
indicate that approximately 12,000 years ago, after the ice age ended
and temperatures began to rise and sea ice around Antarctica decreased,
emperor penguin numbers began to climb.
Goldilocks penguins
The emperor penguin’s relationship with sea ice can be described as a Goldilocks phenomenon.
The penguins need stable sea ice to stand on during their breeding
season. If the sea ice extent is too great then the journey between the
colony and their feeding grounds in the ocean may prove too costly in
terms of energy reserves.
If there is too little sea ice or if the sea ice is not stable
enough, then the penguins cannot establish successful breeding colonies.
The duration of the sea ice season is also important – if the season is
too short for the chicks to adequately mature, then they may not have
time to grow their adult, waterproof feathers and will not survive at
sea.
During the last ice age there was about twice as much ice as there is
today. Emperor penguins were probably unable to breed in more than a
few locations around Antarctica. The distances from the open ocean,
where the penguins feed, to the stable sea ice where they breed was
probably too great in most of their modern breeding locations.
The three populations that did manage to survive the ice age may have
done so by breeding near polynyas – areas of ocean that are kept free
of sea ice by wind and currents. One of the most important of these
polynyas was located in the Ross Sea.
Uncertain future
Because of this Goldilocks relationship emperor penguins are facing
an uncertain future. Antarctic sea ice extent has been measured using
satellites for the past 35 years. In this time, large changes with very
different trends in different regions have been observed.
For the past three years in a row winter sea ice has broken records
for total maximum extent. This overall increasing trend masks major
regional changes in the extent of the sea ice field and the duration of
the sea ice season.
In some areas, such as the Bellingshausen Sea, there has been a large
decline in sea ice while in others, including the Ross Sea, sea ice is
increasing. These fluctuations in sea ice are likely placing a huge strain on emperor penguin populations,
which is set to continue into the future. As areas suitable for emperor
penguin breeding become scarcer it is becoming increasingly important
to conserve areas known to support penguin populations.
It’s clear that the Ross Sea was a critical area for emperor penguins
in the past and this suggests it will provide an important refuge for
breeding colonies in the future. This emphasises the need for careful
protection of this vital part of the Antarctic ecosystem.
A marine protected area, to protect roughly 1.34 million square
kilometres of the Ross Sea from commercial fishing, was proposed by New
Zealand and the United States at the last meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources in October 2014. The proposal was rejected, but a Ross Sea marine park is likely to be on the agenda again at the 2015 meeting.
Emperor penguins are remarkably hardy birds, surviving in one of the
harshest environments on earth. However their reliance on a narrow range
of suitable habitat highlights their fragility, and raises concern over
their future in a world undergoing its most rapid environmental change
in history.