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Climate change turns birds into cannibals

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Climate change turns birds into cannibals

By on Aug 2, 2016Share

Could climate change be turning some species into cannibals? No, not humans — not yet, anyway. We’ve already seen polar bears and lobster eat their own kind for sustenance, thanks to melting ice and rising water temperatures.

Now, you can add Washington State’s gull population to that list. In the Pacific Northwest researchers have noticed a disturbing trend: As sea temperatures rise, plankton have dropped into lower, colder waters; fish have followed the plankton down. Gulls, which can no longer find enough food in shallow waters, have turned to eating each other’s chicks.

“It doesn’t seem like a lot, but a one-tenth of a degree change in seawater temperature correlates to a 10 percent increase in (the odds of) cannibalism,” said Jim Hayward, a seabird biologist, according to the Associated Press.

In the past 60 years, the Pacific Ocean has been warming 15 times the rate as any measured in 10,000 years.

If the gulls’ food-scarcity situation doesn’t improve, Hayward worries that “super cannibals” could evolve: A bird adapted to feed exclusively off its own species.

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Climate change turns birds into cannibals

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8,000 oil workers evacuated from Fort McMurray fire. Again.

8,000 oil workers evacuated from Fort McMurray fire. Again.

By on May 17, 2016Share

Two weeks after it began, the Fort McMurray wildfire is continuing to burn out of control. On Monday, winds shifted and sent the fire in the direction of oil sands facilities.

As many as 8,000 of the oil workers who’d been working to restart oil production were evacuated after the wildfire — which the media has nicknamed “the Beast” — jumped a critical firebreak late on Monday, moving at a rate of more than 100 feet per minute. The evacuations will prolong a shutdown of oil sands operations, which is costing about 1 million barrels of crude oil per day.

Initial reports of the Fort McMurray wildfire speculated that the blaze could continue for months. Now it’s looking like those speculations may come true. Meanwhile, a second, smaller blaze in the province prompted more mandatory evacuations, including a gas facility, northwest of the city of Edmonton.

And the fire season is just getting started.

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8,000 oil workers evacuated from Fort McMurray fire. Again.

Posted in alo, Anchor, FF, GE, ONA, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on 8,000 oil workers evacuated from Fort McMurray fire. Again.