Wednesday, June 5, 2013

PUFFINS ARE DYING OF STARVATION

The Atlantic puffin population is at risk in the United States, and there are signs the seabirds are in distress in other parts of the world.

In the Gulf of Maine, the comical-looking seabirds have been dying of starvation and losing body weight, possibly because of shifting fish populations as ocean temperatures rise, according to scientists.

The survival rates of fledglings on Maine’s two largest puffin colonies plunged last summer, and puffins are in declining health at the largest puffin colony in the Gulf, on a Canadian island about 10 miles off eastern Maine. Dozens of emaciated birds were found washed ashore in Massachusetts and Bermuda this past winter, likely victims of starvation.
One day, I hope to see puffins.  When I was in Scotland three years ago, we did not see the birds, as the timing was wrong, but I find puffins with their colorful bills fascinating, and I'm so sad that their habitat is affected by climate change.  A good many people in this country still believe that warnings about the detrimental effects of climate change caused by burning fossil fuels and chemicals dumped into the water and released into the air are conspiracies cooked up by bleeding-heart liberals, but there can be no doubt that the effects on the food chain in the sea, in streams and rivers, and on land, beginning with the tiniest of organisms and moving upward to affect larger animals and birds, is devastating.  The numbers of butterflies and bees are greatly reduced, mainly due to insecticides and destruction of habitats.  Polar bears are drowning, because of melting ice floes caused by warmer temperatures in Arctic waters, and as humans encroach on the the habitats of elephants, lions, and tigers and continue to hunt them down, their numbers have fallen greatly.  The creatures I mention off the top of my head in addition to the puffins, are only a very few of the many species under threat, the tip of the iceberg, so to speak, and the icebergs are melting at a rapid rate and will cause the sea waters to rise and eventually flood out coastal areas all over the world.

What will it take to convince the doubters that it may already be too late to reverse the detrimental effects?  I don't know, but we'd sure as hell better start trying.  

9 comments:

  1. Some days this stuff hurts my heart so bad I cannot swallow. What are we doing to this wonderful world?
    amyj

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  2. For bayou insomniacs*: live streaming PuffinCam on Burhou, next to Alderney in the Channel Islands.

    http://burhou.livingislands.co.uk/

    * We think we're about five hours in front of you, so you'd probably see them coming up for early morning feed about midnight your time.

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    1. James, how lovely. Thank you. I'll take another look right before I go to bed tonight and when I awake tomorrow morning.

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    2. James, I saw the puffins in the livestream. Another variety of bird, a seagull I think, took center stage in front of the camera on the island today.

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    3. A pair of puffins were caught kissing right in front of the camera. Adorable. With their short legs, the birds remind me of penguins when they walk.

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  3. I am with Amyj. The puffins on the Cliffs of Moher are where I wanted to see the puffins while in Ireland, but like you we were there to early. They are such lovely birds and I pray they come back but with the way our culture does not value nature these days I am not sure it will happen.

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    1. Christi, puffins go to breed on Staffa and Tresnish Isles, which we visited by boat from the Isle of Mull in Scotland, but we were too late in the season to see them. Too few of us bother to care about the other living creatures on the planet. Too few of us care about other humans of the planet, for that matter.

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