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mick silver
3rd January 2015, 03:43 PM
Pacific Coast Sea Bird Die-off Puzzles ScientistsSALEM, Ore. — Jan 3, 2015, 3:36 PM ET











http://a.abcnews.com/images/US/AP_cassins_auklet_blur_jt_150103_16x9_992.jpgIn this Saturday, July 8, 2006, file photo, a Cassin's auklet chick is displayed at the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge, in San Francisco.
Ben Margot/AP Photo






http://a.abcnews.com/assets/images/logo/AP_logo_update_20130709.gif
Scientists are trying to figure out what's behind the deaths of seabirds that have been found by the hundreds along the Pacific Coast since October.
Mass die-offs of the small, white-bellied gray birds known as Cassin's aucklets have been reported from British Columbia (http://abcnews.go.com/topics/news/canada.htm) to San Luis Obispo, California.
It's normal for some seabirds to die during harsh winter conditions, especially during big storms, but the scale of the current die-off is unusual.
"To be this lengthy and geographically widespread, I think is kind of unprecedented," Phillip Johnson, executive director of the Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition, told the Salem Statesman Journal (http://stjr.nl/1CZBwvU). "It's an interesting and somewhat mysterious event."
The birds appear to be starving to death, so experts don't believe a toxin is the culprit, said Julia Burco, a wildlife veterinarian for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
But why the birds can't find food is a mystery.
Researchers say it could be the result of a successful breeding season, leading to too many young birds competing for food. Unusually violent storms might be pushing the birds into areas they're not used to or preventing them from foraging. Or a warmer, more acidic ocean could be affecting the supply of tiny zooplankton, such as krill, that the birds eat.
The U.S. Geological Survey's National Wildlife Health Center in Wisconsin is conducting additional necropsies on dead birds, researchers said.
Robert Ollikainen of Tillamook, Oregon, found 132 dead birds on the beach there, including 126 Cassin's auklets on Dec. 26. "It was pretty dramatic," Ollikainen said.
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Information from: Statesman Journal, http:// (http://www.statesmanjournal.com/)

Spectrism
3rd January 2015, 04:19 PM
Couldn't be the biggest change the Pacific Ocean has had in the last 5000 years- Fuku radiation.... nahhhh.

crimethink
3rd January 2015, 05:43 PM
Couldn't be the biggest change the Pacific Ocean has had in the last 5000 years- Fuku radiation.... nahhhh.

The levels of Cs-137 are "far below the level of concern." :rolleyes:

Spectrism
3rd January 2015, 06:34 PM
The levels of Cs-137 are "far below the level of concern." :rolleyes:

This is true for those who are not concerned.

midnight rambler
3rd January 2015, 06:54 PM
This is true for those who are not concerned.

Of course concerns can morph, according to the threat(s) and political perspective. For example, the Japanese govt. thinks the shit flowing out of Fukushima isn't that great of a concern although they ARE 'making an effort'. In contrast the Russians (as those rotten commie bastard Soviet swine) actually threw a shitload of resources in a very short period of time at Chernobyl (a smaller in scale calamity than Fukushima).

Quite a contrast in how the Russians were 'concerned' vs. how the Japanese govt. is 'concerned'.

pioneer
3rd January 2015, 07:17 PM
if it is zooplankton (krill) that is the missing link, there goes pill pusher mercola's krill pills.

Glass
3rd January 2015, 08:28 PM
I think the Fukushima event is unfixable,the Japanese govt is a puppet. Like the gulf no one is doing anything.

Remember when they used to send in people like Red Adair. 1 guy with total authority to get it done. No chance in the Japanese situation for a nuclear fixer, because the plan is what is going down now. Make motions go nowhere. As for the Gulf. What problem?

I like how the expert says "I don't know". more or less. Seriously? Can't draw a simple conclusion? Poor hiring procedures going on in that organization.