Sharon Begley
|
Jun 18, 2008 05:55 PM
Polar bears
have enough people advocating for them and working to save them from
the effects of global warming, so how about some sympathy for puffins?
A warmer world threatens polar bears because it melts the arctic
sea ice they use as a hunting platform. It threatens puffins—the
seabirds whose scientific name, Fratercula arctica, means
“little brother of the north,” because their black and white plumage
are reminiscent of a friar’s robes—because it alters o cean currents
and salinity in a way that can decrease the plankton and fish that
puffins eat. Such as:
- On Iceland’s western coast, ocean temperatures have risen 3.6°F
in the last two decades, and as a result one of the puffins’ favorite
fish dinners—sand lance—have disappeared. Replacing them are less
nutritious fish.
- The absence of sand lance has also led to widespread starvation
of chicks and breeding failures among puffins on Britain’s Shetland
Islands. The situation is made worse by the kudzu-like growth of the
tree mallow (Lavatera arborea), a plant native to the
Mediterranean region that has made itself at home up north thanks to
global warming and that has overgrown puffin nesting habitat.
- On Norway’s Rost Island, where puffins typically feed on small
herring, the fish have followed the cold-water plankton farther north.
“Herring have now moved beyond the feeding range of puffins, resulting
in the death of most nestlings,” the National Audubon Society
reports. “The timing of puffin breeding is [also] being influenced by
climate change and food may not be available when needed by the puffin
chicks.”
This is all that much sadder because of the Herculean efforts to
save one particular colony of puffins, those on Seal Island, 18 miles
off the coast of Rockland, Maine. Puffins there had been almost
completely wiped out by centuries of hunting (for their eggs, meat and
feathers). But 35 years ago the Audubon Society started Project Puffin,
in which biologist Stephen Kress and colleagues hand-carried nearly
2,000 puffin chicks from Newfoundland, where puffins are abundant, to
Seal Island by plane, truck, and boat. Kress and his team fed each
chick small fish, and when the puffins fledged the scientists crossed
their fingers in the hope that the birds would return to the island to
establish a breeding colony. Actually, the scientists did more than
cross their fingers: they set up wooden puffin decoys and mirrors to
convince the puffins they had company.
It worked, and today about 90 pairs nest at Eastern Egg Rock and more than 330 pairs nest at Seal Island.
If you have RealPlayer, you can watch the puffins at http://www.projectpuffin.org/puffin-cam.html .
Notice the body language. A puffin walking quickly with its head bowed
is signaling that it is “just passing through and doesn’t mean any
trouble” as it walks through a crowded colony and inevitably crosses
another puffin’s territory. If you see a puffin gaping, it’s likely a
prelude to aggression. T he wider the beak is opened the more upset the
puffin; if he’s really ticked off he’ll stomp his foot. T he best times
are morning and early afternoon; very relaxing.
But here, too, global warming threatens to flood key puffin
colonies, says Kress, who doesn’t want to see his decades of work
swallowed up by the rising seas.
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