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Arctic Warms, Sea Ice Shrinks, Extinction Risk Grows
SAN FRANCISCO, California - From foxes to whales to walruses to plankton, Arctic species are being pushed toward extinction by rapid climate change, finds a new report by two conservation groups.
From foxes to whales to walruses to plankton, Arctic species are being pushed toward extinction by rapid climate change, finds a new report by two conservation groups. (photo by Flickr user Drew Avery) In a report released Monday, the Center for Biological Diversity and Care for the Wild International document the situations of 17 Arctic animals trying to survive the effects of climate change and ocean acidification.
"The polar bear is the best-known victim of rapid melting in the Arctic, but if we don't slash greenhouse pollution, many more creatures will follow it down the path to extinction," said Shaye Wolf, the Center's climate science director and lead author of the report, "Extinction: It's Not Just for Polar Bears."
Most of the 17 imperiled species are mammals - the Arctic fox, polar bear, caribou or reindeer, muskox, and Pacific walrus, as well as four whales - gray, beluga, bowhead and narwhal. Four ice seals are also at risk - the ringed, bearded, harp and ribbon seals. The report names three seabirds in jeopardy - the Kittlitz's murrelet, spectacled eider and ivory gull; and also finds the sea butterfly, a species of plankton, to be at risk of extinction.
The minimum extent of Arctic sea is is smaller than ever, satellite data shows.
Arctic sea ice generally reaches its annual minimum extent in mid-September. On September 3, ice extent dropped below the seasonal minimum for 2009 to become the third lowest in the satellite record, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
This August, ice extent for the month was the second lowest in the satellite record, after 2007.
According to NASA scientists in the Cryospheric Sciences Branch, a satellite-based data record starting in late 1978 shows that indeed rapid changes have been occurring in the Arctic, where the perennial ice cover has been declining at the rate of about 13 percent per decade and the ice cover as a whole has been declining at the lesser rate of about five percent per decade.
This year, the Northwest Passage and the Northern Sea Route are largely free of ice, allowing the potential for a first circumnavigation of the Arctic Ocean now being attempted by two expeditions - one from Norway and one from Russia.
The conservation groups say this rapid disappearance and thinning of the sea ice is having devastating effects on the many species that depend on it for rearing young, hunting, resting and avoiding predators.
Arctic whales are at risk from increasing offshore oil drilling and shipping activity as areas become ice-free, which heightens threats from oil spills, ship strikes and noise.
Some Arctic species have already experienced widespread die-offs and population declines after losing key habitats and food sources, the groups report. Others face extreme weather events or suffer new pressure from predators and pathogens moving northward.
Sea ice loss is forcing Pacific walrus mothers and calves to come to shore, where young can be trampled to death in stampedes.
Researchers from the U.S. Geological Survey's Alaska Science Center, who have been tracking walrus movements using satellite radio tags, report that up to 20,000 walruses are now gathering in herds on the Alaskan side of the Chukchi Sea.
"For the third time in the last four years, thousands of Pacific walruses are hauling out onto the northwest shores of Alaska to rest in the absence of sea ice over the continental shelf of the Chukchi Sea," the USGS research team said August 30.
In February 2008 the Center for Biological Diversity filed a formal scientific petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service requesting protection of the Pacific walrus under the Endangered Species Act. Under a lawsuit settlement, the Service must make a decision as to whether the species should be protected by January 31, 2011.
Early sea-ice breakup prematurely separates ringed and harp seal mothers from their pups before the pups are big enough to survive, the conservation groups report.
Meanwhile, the warming Arctic is still putting polar bears at risk. Eight of the world's 19 polar bear populations are declining as they struggle to raise young and hunt for food on shrinking ice sheets.
On land, tundra habitat is moving northward, thawing permafrost threatens to drain wetlands, and extreme winter weather events are causing die-offs of Arctic grazers like muskoxen that are prevented from reaching their food.
The Arctic fox is disappearing from the southern edge of the tundra as larger, more dominant red foxes move northward and lemming prey grow less abundant as temperatures warm.
Seabirds that forage near glaciers and sea ice are losing their feeding grounds and resting places, while thawing permafrost threatens to drain their wetland breeding habitat.
Tundra dwellers like the caribou and muskox are being affected by warmer spring temperatures that alter food abundance, as well as extreme winter weather events leaving dense snow and ice crusts that obstruct their access to food, the groups report.
Lives of the Arctic's smallest creatures as well as the largest are being disrupted by climate warming.
The oceans have absorbed more than a quarter of all of human carbon dioxide emissions - generated by burning coal, oil and natural gas. The addition of this vast quantity of CO2 is changing the chemistry of ocean water, turning it more acidic, scientists around the world have documented.
The Arctic Ocean is becoming corrosive to shell-building creatures like plankton and clams more quickly than temperate waters. "It could become lethal to the most sensitive shell-builders by 2050, threatening the marine ecosystem with collapse," the groups state in their report.
"The plight of Arctic species is effectively acting as an early warning system. We need our governments to act now to protect the Arctic ecosystem from collapse," said Mark Jones, programs director for Care for the Wild International. "If we don't, the impacts will be devastating, not just for the Arctic, but for the whole planet."
The report concludes that science-based actions are urgently needed to protect Arctic wildlife.
Atmospheric CO2 must be reduced from its current level of 390 parts per million to, at most, 325 to 350 ppm to avoid catastrophic impacts from climate change and ocean acidification, and to restore Arctic sea ice to the size it was 25 years ago, the conservationists advise.
To protect Arctic species, the groups urge the curbing of powerful, short-lived greenhouse pollutants like black carbon and methane, the prevention of new oil and gas development in the Arctic, and the reduction of threats to Arctic wildlife from overhunting and contaminants.
Click here to read the report, "Extinction: It's Not Just for Polar Bears."
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14 Comments so far
Show AllWhen I read Jared Diamonds "Collapse" I tried to put myself in the mindset of the peoples of Easter Island and the other areas he spoke of when trying to understand "How on Earth could they be chopping down all those trees (Easter Island) and not recognize what was happening.?"
It seems I did not have to "Put myself in that Mindset" at all as "we" seem to be there as a species even now.
So IS this next mass extinction inevitable? Is a massive worldwide population crash of species including that of Homo Sapiens what is needed to cleanse the Earth of Homo Sapiens?
One theory advanced by both Scientists and Science fiction writers on the seeming abscence of highly advanced technological civilizations in the Universe is that they inevitably arrive at a state where they destroy themselves.
This either through war or through "Technological successes" that cause a huge leap in the population followed by a massive dieback due to enviromental degradation. Is that our fate?
I think that is our fate. Not extinction, but a massive die back, where small groups of humans will continue to survive. We may be terrible at understanding the compounded effects of our seemingly insignificant individual behavior on the scale of large populations, but we are still ingenious and adaptable. Just think of the misery that will attend this rebalancing of the earth's ecosystem. It makes me regret having children.
Extinction is the ONLY fate for mankind (as for all other species).
True enough!
Although I won't miss Polar Bears, mean things kill their own pups if they get hungry. I could watch the drown all day.
Plankton floats, so do walruses and seals. Honestly if theres a polar die back you'll need to tell me as I can't see it from my back porch.
>^^<
P.S. and if just stay hunkerd down in this system, the universe aint gonna miss us when we die off either.
Hello GwNorth
"A huge leap in the population followed by a massive dieback," is in fact the ecological norm. The balance between a species and its means of subsistence rarely remains steady; it cycles back and forth.
Consider, for simplicity's sake, the balance between foxes and rabbits in a limited environment. As long as rabbits are abundant the foxes will continue to multiply. But when there are too many foxes they will eat up almost all of the rabbits and the fox population will plummet. In the absence of foxes the rabbit population will skyrocket, which will in turn allow the foxes to increase to their level of overpopulation. And so on for an extended cycle of boom and bust for both species.
In the case of humans, however, under the influence of intelligence and invention, the cycle acquires a third dimension. It becomes a spiral. When humans had wiped out many species of big game, such as the mammoth and, in America, the horse, it became necessary to invent agriculture and cities. After the black plague, which wiped out 30 to 40% of the Eurasian population in the 1340's and 50's, and continued huge epidemics into the 1600's; science, technology and sanitation arose.
Read Marvin Harris, "Cannibals and Kings: Origins of Cultures," for a good anthropological and historical survey of human cultures in terms of population and means of production.
What will happen to our culture and economy? Obviously our population has outrun the ability of our waste - industrial - capitalist - war economy to support it. Almost certainly there will be a population decline. How steep and how long lasting? That depends on how many of us start now to prepare for the next economy of sustainable energy, agriculture and co-operation. Not just nations and companies, but you and I in our daily lives and in our communities. Prepare now for a 10-10-10 work party. To find a communal work party near you, or to start one, go to ... www.350.org
As knowledge accumulates, wisdom--alas--decays. But we won't know until it is too late.
This is the face of "Progress".
There are still ways not to go extinct, but there is no will to avoid it by the profit seeking Multi NationalCorporations because they want the warming to allow for shipping routes and extractive industries.
Read today about MRSA in our meat and we have that "super-bug" from India showing up; combine those together and/or with a "flu"...it's been one hell of a ride...
With all species except modern man only the strongest survive and have offspring. As for modern man, medical science has made it possible for all types of genetic weaknesses to survive and propagate. In the future, all newborn humans will have incurable genetic diseases thus leading to the extinction of humans.
By the way, thus far, Southern California has not had its usual summer weather. There has not been enough warmth to ripen tomatoes. Maybe global warming is not such a bad thing. Eventually, even Finland will be able to raise tomatoes.
According to the Mayan Prophecies, come Jan. 2013 we won't have anything more to worry about. Earth will continue but humankind won't. I don't believe that climate change is entirely man's fault alone, but we certainly have contributed to it. My heart goes out to the animal kingdom, suffering through none of their fault.
some good satelite data here:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/
30-day animation of the ice cap melting:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/CT/animate.arctic.color.0.html
this allows you to compare two different days of ice cap condition:
SplitURL:
[http://igloo.atmos.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/test/
print.sh?fm=09&fd=12&fy=2007&sm=09&sd=12&sy=2010
the above compares sept 12 of this year with sept 12 2007.
you can see that the ice is in worse condition this year if you look at the extent of 80% ice(pink).
much of the "ice extent" reported above is actually less than 50% ice (red & yellow).
if its not a super cold winter this year, next year will be the smallest ice cap ever.
Easter Island is what people do. Live for today, pray to sky gods for a better future, and fight for what we can get for ourselves while demonising those who oppose us. Meanwhile we look out every day on a diminishing resource base and yet refuse to see it. I don't understand us, but I recognize what we do.
We are breeding up towards a big collapse; it may not come this year or next, but it will come, that is inevitable. Whether any of us survive is not to be known, but I'd guess some of us (not me I'm certain) will.
It will be a messy world for a good while, but gradually the huts will form and smoke will rise form the fires as humans struggle once more to survive. Not a very clever species, are we!
>>Not a very clever species, are we!<<
Being one of the human species, I have the right to declare we seem to be more of an intelligent pestilence. The less fortunate wallow in everyday struggles, despair and desire to just get a break today. Uniting for a common goal is an impossibility as apathy is the worst enemy. The above average and well off turn a blind eye to those below and want to keep climbing. We are all so caught up in life to lift an eyebrow of care toward our future. We are on a life raft made of cheese and will eat to survive until the life raft is gone and then we will realize we should have placed future drowning somewhere in our priorities.
As fertile a breeding ground CD is for desires to reshape our future and shun our current destiny, it never leaves the talking stage. I read here daily about people who walk the walk. I love the lists. The order of things to fix from 1 to 10. I hop from topic to topic. Environment, economy, war, etc. Guilty as the rest, I watch for that one spark. The one who will rise out of our midst with the ideas and conviction to gather us as one.
One person going from door to door, passing out prophecy and hope will always get the reaction we all just imagined. What if 50 people of all different walks, slowly ambled down your street ? Wielding a pamphlet that offered a gathering of minds. No Republicans or Democrats ! Just people with "Common Dreams". The attention and interest would be overwhelming. Good people realizing we are all in this together and United we stand takes on a whole new meaning. Trumpets will sound, doves will soar, the sun bursts through the clouds and .......bzzz bzzz bzzz. Oops, alarm clock again ?! Gotta get up and make the donuts !
Love to read here. Love to dream. Hope for the day... !