“Countless”
dead birds reported in Pacific off US coast, nothing will eat the
bodies
- “There are no seals present”
- Expert: “The fish are not there… all of them are starving”
- Animals “acting weird, sick and weak, too weak to fly, too weak to run” Resident: We want to know if it’s from Fukushima (VIDEO)
15
September, 2015
KGW,
Aug 25, 2015 (emphasis added): Birds
dying of starvation
along coast
— Hundreds of birds are washing ashore either dead or dying along
the Oregon and Southwest Washington Coast. The majority of them are
common murres… Researchers say that the die-off
started about three weeks ago…
the Wildlife Center of the North Coast [says] Almost all
of them are starving.
“They’re totally
emaciated…”
said Laurel Berblinger, a volunteer at the center. According to the
biologists, the
fish the birds normally eat are not there…
with so
many dead birds along the beaches now,
it’s important to keep children and dogs away… Biologists say
they are bracing
for a lot more
of this.
KBBI,
Aug 4, 2015: The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is
receiving multiple reports indicating a significant
increase in dead and dying birds
found on beaches in the Homer area… [Biologist Leslie] Slater says…
“What we’re seeing more precisely is that birds seem to be
starving.”… These deaths don’t seem to be isolated to Homer’s
beaches. There are reports
of similar deaths down the Alaska Peninsula and the eastern edge of
the Aleutians.
Slater says it’s possible they could
be related to dead whales.
NBC
News,
Sep 12 2015: Toxic
Algae May Threaten West Coast Marine Economy for Years…
the toxic bloom could last through 2016, said Raphael Kudela, a
professor of ocean ecology at the University of California Santa
Cruz… “that would be pretty much unprecedented to have blooms two
years in a row.”
The size
of the bloom and the amount of time it has lasted in the ocean are
already unprecedented…
Scientists had previously believed that domoic acid was water
soluble—meaning that it could be flushed out of the bodies of
animals that ingested it, Kudela said. But researchers have since
observed domoic acid building up in the tissues of fish… the toxin
may be spreading to a wider array of marine life than they had
previously thought was possible. “That really suggests that it is
really going to work its way through the food web,” Kudela told
CNBC… [Dan Ayres, a coastal shellfish lead biologist with the
Washington Dept. of Fish & Wildlife] said that if ocean waters
remain warm in future years—the effects
could be severe and impact the whole ocean food web.
Alaska
Native Tribal Health Consortium – Local Environmental Observer
reports:
>
Aug
2, 2015: Dead birds – Sand Point, Alaska
— When going on her evening walk in the boat harbor, Tiffany
Jackson noticed a dead bird floating in the water. This is just one
of many
dead birds spotted in the boat harbor this summer…
With finding
all these dead birds
in the harbor, we are wondering
if there is some kind of virus or sickness
in these birds.
>
Aug
17, 2015: Bird die-offs – Port Heiden, Alaska
— [Residents] noticed that there were several dead birds washing
ashore in the last month with an increase
in numbers in the past week…
This
year seems to be different than the past
– several sea birds washing up, other animals
are not eating the washed up carcasses
and no
seals are swimming along the shore or the mouth of the river.
Community members do not know what is killing the sea birds – or
why there
are not seals present
and are wondering why and if other communities are experiencing the
same?
>
Aug
17, 2015: Low seal numbers – Port Heiden, Alaska
— Residents have noticed a decrease
in the number of seals
up and down the shoreline outside of Port Heiden. This year some
residents have not seen one seal,
and have noticed a large
number of dead sea birds
washing up along the shore.
>
Aug
17, 2015: Murre deaths – Nanwalek, Alaska
— A common murre or common guillemot (Uria aalge) was found on
August 17, 2015 alone the shores of Nanwalek; this one was chewed on
when we found it and the other murre was reported on 8/21/15… We
want to be kept appraised of these impacts whether it is an algae
bloom/PSP related event or potentially
related to the Fukushima Power plant
(earth quake) нdisaster?
>
Aug
21, 2015: Dead sea birds – Goodnews Bay, Alaska
— Resident had observed countless
dead seagulls
and other sea birds that were found dead. The amount
she had seen was countless,
she also said that some of the birds were acting
weird, sick and weak, too weak to fly and too weak to run.
The death of these birds could affect the other sea animals, and then
there would be a huge
die off of all the other sea animals.
In 2014 and the year before, on the Lower North Shore of the Gulf of St-Lawrence, flocks of Gannets were killed when they began to act weirdly, diving at high speed in shallow waters. Gannets were also observed stranded on the beach and refusing to stay in the water when put back to sea, A significant drop of population was also observed at a Labrador New Foundland gannet colony as well as, but at a lesser degree,at the Bonaventure Island Sea Birds Sanctuary, located at the Eastern tip of the Gaspé Peninsula, in Province of Québec.No significant media attention was given to these events.
ReplyDeleteIn 2014 and the year before, on the Lower North Shore of the Gulf of St-Lawrence, flocks of Gannets were killed when they began to act weirdly, diving at high speed in shallow waters. Gannets were also observed stranded on the beach and refusing to stay in the water when put back to sea, A significant drop of population was also observed at a Labrador New Foundland gannet colony as well as, but at a lesser degree,at the Bonaventure Island Sea Birds Sanctuary, located at the Eastern tip of the Gaspé Peninsula, in Province of Québec.No significant media attention was given to these events.
ReplyDeleteCouple of years ago, on the Lower North Shore of the Gulf of St-Lawrence, flocks of Gannets were killed when they began to act weirdly, diving at high speed in shallow waters. Gannets were also observed stranded on the beaches and refusing to stay in the water when put back to sea, A significant drop of population was also observed at a Labrador New Foundland gannet colony as well as, but to a lesser degree,at the Bonaventure Island Sea Birds Sanctuary (Federal), located at the Eastern tip of the Gaspé Peninsula, in Province of Québec.No significant media attention was given to these events.
ReplyDelete