Showing posts with label climatic warming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climatic warming. Show all posts

Friday, January 6, 2012

'Dramatic' loss of harp seals amid warming: study


WASHINGTON — Harp seal pups off the coast of eastern Canada are dying at alarming rates due to a loss of winter ice cover, according to US scientists who questioned on Wednesday if the population will be able to recover.
The study by researchers at Duke University shows that seasonal ice cover in the harp seal breeding regions of the North Atlantic Ocean has declined about six percent per decade since 1979, when satellite data began.
The result has been entire generations of newly born seal pups dying due to their disappearing habitat, said the study published in the open access science journal PLoS ONE.
"The kind of mortality we're seeing in eastern Canada is dramatic," said co-author David Johnston, a research scientist at the Duke University Marine Lab.
"Entire year-classes may be disappearing from the population in low ice years -- essentially all of the pups die," he said. "It calls into question the resilience of the population."
For recent data, researchers looked at satellite images of winter ice from 1992 to 2010 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, a prime breeding region off the east coast of Canada, and compared them to yearly reports of dead seal pup strandings in the region.
They also compared stranding rates to records of a climate phenomenon known as the North Atlantic Oscillation, which controls the intensity and track of westerly winds and storms and exerts a major influence on sea ice formation.
They found that years of weaker NAO and lighter ice cover showed higher death rates among seal pups.
While harp seals have adapted to the earlier spring melts in recent years by developing shorter 12-day nursing periods, it remains unclear if their population can sustain itself against sea ices losses over time.
"As a species, they're well suited to deal with natural short-term shifts in climate, but our research suggests they may not be well adapted to absorb the effects of short-term variability combined with longer-term climate change and other human influences such as hunting and by-catch," Johnston said.
The team also looked back at data from 1950 to 1972 which showed that NAO weather changes were tied to big declines in the seal population, followed by period of recovery from 1973 to 2000.
"But there's a caveat: regardless of NAO conditions, our models show that sea ice cover in all harp seal breeding regions in the North Atlantic have been declining by as much as six percent a decade over the study period," added Johnston.
"The losses in bad years outweigh the gains in good years."

Friday, September 23, 2011

Shieldbug spotted in UK for first time

One of many animals to arrive here thanks to global warmingSeptember 2011: A shieldbug never previously seen in Britain has been found at the headquarters of Kent Wildife Trust.

Originally discovered by local photographer and keen naturalist Jason Elmore at Tyland Barn, Sandling, near Maidstone - at least 50 more specimens have since been found there.

The find has been verified by national recorder and expert, Dr Tristan Bantock, who said: ‘The horehound shieldbug is one of many species of insects that have recently arrived in Britain as a result of climatic warming.

Likes warm, dry weather‘Although very similar to the native pied shieldbug on the continent, the horehound shieldbug is found in warmer, drier situations and this will surely also be the case in Britain.'

Kent Wildife Trust's Chief Executive, John Bennett, added: ‘This is indeed an exciting discovery. It shows that by being constantly aware of what is happening around us we can learn more about our wildlife and what is happening in our world.

‘In this case the arrival of a tiny traveller may tell us about the effects of a changing climate but it has also brought an exquisite jewel to join the rich variety of wildlife that finds sanctuary in the nature park at Tyland Barn.'

The foodplant of the species is the Black Horehound, a perennial herb that supports a number of scarce insect species such as the micromoth Nemophora fasciella and the ground bug Raglius alboacuminatus. Growing up to 3ft high, it has a very strong smell, and has clusters of hairy, reddish-purple flowers that bloom from May to August.
http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/shieldbug-uk.html