Pacific
Coast sea bird die-off puzzles scientists
4
January, 2015
SALEM,
Oregon (AP) " Scientists are trying to figure out what's behind
the deaths of seabirds that have been found by the hundreds along the
Pacific Coast since October.
Mass
die-offs of the small, white-bellied gray birds known as Cassin's
aucklets have been reported from British Columbia to San Luis Obispo,
California.
It's
normal for some seabirds to die during harsh winter conditions,
especially during big storms, but the scale of the current die-off is
unusual.
"To
be this lengthy and geographically widespread, I think is kind of
unprecedented," Phillip Johnson, executive director of the
Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition, told the Salem Statesman
Journal. "It's an interesting and somewhat mysterious event."
The
birds appear to be starving to death, so experts don't believe a
toxin is the culprit, said Julia Burco, a wildlife veterinarian for
the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
But
why the birds can't find food is a mystery.
Researchers
say it could be the result of a successful breeding season, leading
to too many young birds competing for food.
Unusually
violent storms might be pushing the birds into areas they're not used
to or preventing them from foraging. Or a warmer, more acidic ocean
could be affecting the supply of tiny zooplankton, such as krill,
that the birds eat.
The
U.S. Geological Survey's National Wildlife Health Center in Wisconsin
is conducting additional necropsies on dead birds, researchers said.
Robert
Ollikainen of Tillamook, Oregon, found 132 dead birds on the beach
there, including 126 Cassin's auklets on Dec. 26. "It was pretty
dramatic," Ollikainen said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.