Walruses forced ashore by ice melt
Tens of thousands of walruses have come ashore in northwest Alaska because the sea ice they normally rest on has melted.
U.S. government scientists say this massive move to shore by walruses is unusual in the United States. It has happened at least twice before, however, in 2007 and 2009. In those years Arctic sea ice also was at or near record low levels.
The walruses "stretch out for one mile (1.6 kilometres) or more. This is just packed shoulder-to-shoulder," U.S. Geological Survey biologist Anthony Fischbach said in a telephone interview from Alaska. He estimated their number at tens of thousands.
Scientists with two federal agencies are most concerned about the one-ton (0.90 metric tons) female walruses stampeding and crushing each other and their smaller calves near Point Lay, Alaska, on the Chukchi Sea. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is trying to change airplane flight patterns to avoid spooking the animals. Officials have also asked locals to be judicious about hunting, said agency spokesman Bruce Woods.
Arctic animals under threat
The Pacific walrus is one of 17 Arctic species listed as being threatened with extinction by rapid climate change and ocean acidification, said a report released Monday by the Center for Biological Diversity and Care for the Wild International, a Tuscon, Ariz.-based non-profit organization.
The other species profiled in the report are the:
- Arctic fox.
- Polar bear.
- Ringed seal.
- Bearded seal.
- Harp seal.
- Ribbon seal.
- Gray whale.
- Beluga whale.
- Bowhead whale.
- Narwhal.
- Sea butterfly.
- Kittlitz’s murrelet.
- Spectacled eider.
- Ivory gull.
- Caribou/reindeer.
- Muskox.
The federal government is in a year-long process to determine if walruses should be put on the endangered species list.
Fischbach said scientists do not know how long the walrus camp-out will last, but there should be enough food for all of them.
During normal summers, the males go off to the Bering Sea, while the females raise their young in the Chukchi. The females rest on sea ice and dive from it to the sea floor for clams and worms.
"When they no longer have a place to rest, they need to go some place and it's a long commute," Fischbach said. "This is directly related to the lack of sea ice."
Loss of sea ice in the Chukchi this summer has surprised scientists. because last winter lots of old established sea ice floated into the region, said Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo. That has disappeared, however.
Although last year was a slight improvement over previous years, Serreze says there's been a long-term decline that he blames on global warming.
"We'll likely see more summers like this," he said. "There is no sign of Arctic recovery."