35,000
Walrus Converge On Alaska Beach As Sea Ice Retreats
In
this aerial photo taken on Sept. 27, 2014, and provided by NOAA, some
35,000 walrus gather on shore near Point Lay, Alaska. Pacific walrus
looking for places to rest in the absence of sea ice are coming to
shore in record numbers on Alaska’s northwest coast. CREDIT:
AP/ NOAA
30 September, 2014
An
estimated 35,000 walrus have come ashore in record numbers on a beach
in northwest Alaska for lack of better ground. As climate change
warms the atmosphere, summer sea ice in the Arctic is diminishing,
likely stranding these walrus from their preferred sea ice outposts.
Arctic sea ice reached its lowest point this year in mid-September,
and NASA reported
it to be the sixth-lowest recorded since 1978.
The
mass gathering of walrus was spotted on Saturday by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s arctic marine mammal
aerial survey. Andrea Medeiros, spokeswoman for the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, said
walrus were first spotted on September 13 and have been moving on and
off shore. Last week, around 50 walrus carcasses were spotted on the
beach, the cause of death may have been a stampede. Unlike seals,
walrus need breaks from swimming and tend to gather in groups.
“It’s
another remarkable sign of the dramatic environmental conditions
changing as the result of sea ice loss,” said
Margaret Williams, managing director of the WWF’s Arctic program.
“The walruses are telling us what the polar bears have told us and
what many indigenous people have told us in the high Arctic, and that
is that the Arctic environment is changing extremely rapidly and it
is time for the rest of the world to take notice and also to take
action to address the root causes of climate change.”
In this aerial photo taken on Sept. 23, 2014 and released by NOAA, some 1500 walrus are gather on the northwest coast of Alaska CREDIT: AP/NOAA
The
walrus are gathered at Point Lay, an Inupiat village 700 miles
north-west of Anchorage on the Chukchi Sea. Walrus were first spotted
in large numbers in the U.S. side of the Chukchi Sea in 2007,
returning again in 2009, The Guardian reported.
In 2011, it was estimated that 30,000 of the animals appeared along a
nearby stretch of beach.
This
year’s minimum Arctic sea ice was 622,000 square miles above the
record low for the satellite era — since 1978 — which occurred in
September 2012, according to data
from the National Snow and Ice Data Center. It was 463,000 square
miles below the 1981 to 2010 average minimum.
I remember asking a friend in Alaska about the plight of the polar bears. She told me that Canadian researchers were being silenced by the Harper regime.
Now I know the answer.
I remember asking a friend in Alaska about the plight of the polar bears. She told me that Canadian researchers were being silenced by the Harper regime.
Now I know the answer.
Russian
Pilots Found Polar Bear Cub Wandering Alone in Arctic
Russian soldiers have found a starving and exhausted polar bear cub, while performing a routine delivery flight in the Arctic.
1
October, 2014
MOSCOW,
October 1 (RIA Novosti) – Russian soldiers have found a starving
and exhausted polar bear cub,
while performing a routine delivery flight in the Arctic, RIA Novosti
reported on Wednesday.
“While
doing a routine delivery flight from Anadyr into Wrangel Island,
pilots saw a tiny polar bear cub running across the coast. Since his
mother was nowhere
to be found, the pilots decided to pick up the cub”, Colonel
Alexander Gordeev, head of the press service of the Eastern Military
District, told RIA Novosti.
When
the pilots approached the cub, the animal did not try to escape, as
he was visibly tired and hungry. The bear cub wolfed down warm cereal
that the pilots offered.
The
cub was named “Umka”, after a famous Russian cartoon character,
and was handed over to Wrangel Island natural reserve, according to
RIA Novosti.
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