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Friday, 17 January 2020
Huge ‘hot blob’ in Pacific Ocean killed nearly a million seabirds
Dead common murres lie washed up on a rocky beach in Whittier, Alaska, on 7 January 2016.
Photograph: Mark Thiessen/AP
A million seabirds died in less than a year as a result of a giant “blob” of hot ocean water off the coast of New Zealand, according to new research.
A study released
by the University of Washington found the birds, called the common
murre, probably died of starvation between the summer of 2015 and the
spring of 2016.
Most dead seabirds never wash ashore, so while 62,000 dead or dying
murres were found along the coasts of Alaska, Washington, Oregon and
California, researchers estimate the total number is closer to 1
million. Alaska saw the most birds wash up. In Prince William Sound in southern Alaska, more than 4,500 bird carcasses were found every kilometer, or 0.62 miles.
A map of the west coast of North America show the extreme
mortality of murres, seabirds who died in mass from a giant heat blob
off New Zealand’s coast. Photograph: PLOSone
The blob stems from a years-long severe marine heatwave,
believed to be caused by an anticyclone weather system that first
appeared in 2013. A weather phenomenon known as El Niño accelerated the
warming temperatures beginning in 2015 and, by 2016, the rising heat
resulted in water temperatures nearly 11F (6C) above average.
Anticyclones form when a mass of air cools, contracts and becomes
more dense, increasing the weight of the atmosphere and the surface air
pressure.
Heat maps at the time showed a massive red blob growing, spanning
more than 380,000 sq miles (1 million sq km). That’s nearly 1.5 times
the size of Texas or four times larger than New Zealand.
The
study found that the murres mostly likely starved to death. The seabird
must eat half its body weight to survive, but food grew scarce amid
intense competition from other creatures. Warming ocean waters gave fish
such as salmon and halibut a metabolism boost, causing a fight for
survival over the limited supply of smaller fish.
Researchers also uncovered other effects, including a massive bloom of harmful algae
along the US west coast that cost fisheries millions of dollars in
revenue. Other animals also died off, including sea lions, tufted
puffins and baleen whales.
“Think of it as a run on the grocery stores at the same time that the
delivery trucks to the stores stopped coming so often,” Julia Parrish, a
co-author of the study and UW professor in the School of Aquatic and
Fishery Sciences, said in a press release.
The murres’ population also took a hit. According to the study, a
limited food supply resulted in reduced breeding colonies across the
entire region. Between the 2015 and 2016 breeding seasons, more than 15
colonies did not produce a single chick. Researchers say those estimates
could be low since they only monitor a quarter of all colonies.
The seabird has not replenished in numbers after the mass die-off.
“The magnitude and scale of this failure has no precedent,” said John
Piatt, the lead researcher. “It was astonishing and alarming, and a
red-flag warning about the tremendous impact sustained ocean warming can
have on the marine ecosystem.”
Researchers cannot determine how long it would take for the population to rebound – or if it ever will.
“In light of predicted global warming trends and the associated
likelihood of more frequent heatwaves”, the study concluded, this could
be a stark warning about the impending effects of the climate crisis.
Meanwhile, another huge heat blob has formed off the Washington coast and up into the Gulf of Alaska, and is growing.
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