Extreme Arctic sea ice melt forces thousands of walruses ashore in Alaska
Survival
of walruses threatened as they wash ashore on a remote barrier island
just before Obama is due to visit region to draw attention to climate
change
27
August, 2015
The
extreme loss of Arctic sea ice due to climate change is forcing
thousands of walruses to crowd ashore on a remote barrier island
off Alaska,
and threatening their survival.
Barack
Obama will be the first US president to visit the Alaskan Arctic on
31 August on a three-day tour to draw attention to the drastic
consequences of climate change for the Arctic, such as warming
winters and the rapid retreat of sea ice.
The
first reported sighting of animals forced to come ashore in the
Chukchi Sea was by a photographer on 23 August, and confirmed by
villagers in the remote hamlet of Point Lay late on Thursday, the US
Fish and Wildlife Service
said.
Such
landings, forced by the absence of sea ice on which to rest and feed,
put the animals at risk of stampede in the limited space of the
barrier island.
The
animals are easily spooked by aircraft or onlookers, government
scientists warned. Trampling deaths are one of the biggest natural
risks.
Sea
ice cover in the winter months fell
to a new low this
year because of climate change and abnormal weather patterns.
Some
scientists believe the Arctic could be entirely ice-free in the
summer months by the 2030s – with profound effects for local
indigenous communities that rely on the ice, as well as wildlife that
depend on extreme conditions.
Since
2000, the forced migration of walruses and their young to barrier
islands such as Point Lay – known as a “haul out” – has
become an increasingly regular occurrence, according to US government
scientists.
“Many
walruses seem to prefer the barrier islands just north of the native
village of Point Lay to haul out,” Jim MacCracken, a supervisory
wildlife biologist with the fish and wildlife service, said.
Last
year, as many as 40,000 animals, mainly females and their young, were
forced ashore. It was the biggest
known haul-out of
its kind in the US Arctic, according to government scientists. The
Federal Aviation Authority re-routed flights and bush pilots were
told to keep their distance to avoid a stampede.
Agency
scientists said about 60 young walruses were killed because of
crowding and stampedes.
“Walruses
often flee haulouts in response to the sight, sound, or odor of
humans or machines. Walruses are particularly sensitive to changes in
engine noise and are more likely to stampede off beaches when planes
turn or fly low overhead,” Andrea Medeiros, a spokeswoman for the
fish and wildlife service, said in an email.
The
villagers have been dreading the prospect of a repeat record haul-out
– and earlier this month appealed to outsiders to keep away from
the area.
“We
do not believe that these sorts of visits are in the best interest of
the walruses and they do not align with the haul out protection role
we have developed and measures we set in place to prevent
disturbances,” Leo Ferreira III, the Point Lay tribal president
said in a statement distributed by US government agencies.
Gary
Braasch, an environmental photographer, said he first spotted the
walruses coming ashore on the southern end of the barrier island,
about two miles from the hamlet of Point Lay, on the evening of 23
August.
Braasch
has spent about a decade photographing evidence of climate change in
Alaska, and had been tracking the movement of tagged walruses through
the US Geological Survey mapping projects.
“What
they looked like by eye was three brown smudges along the beach. They
were not visible as individual animals,” he said. But he said the
blown-up images revealed large numbers of animals. “Certainly they
were in the low thousands at that point.”
Fish
and Wildlife Service officials accused Braasch of violating flight
safeguards and putting the animals at risk – a charge he rejected.
“Several of our biologists looked at the images and noted that it
appeared that many animals were on shore and appeared to be agitated
and fleeing the area,” Medeiros said. “Harassing walrus is
against the law. Operating an aircraft in a manner which results in
harassing or disturbing walruses is prohibited by the Marine Mammal
Protection Act.”
Braasch
said the pilot did not overfly the barrier island, and intentionally
flew several hundred feet beyond the Fish and Wildlife flight
guidelines to avoid the risk of stampede. He said he took his
photograph from more than a mile away. “We were not even close to
the limits they set.”
He
confirmed the government agency had been in contact about flight
concerns.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.