This week in birds - #451
A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:
Black Skimmers in the late evening sun photographed on the beach at Rockport, Texas.*~*~*~*
Once again federal scientists are predicting an "above average" Atlantic hurricane season. This follows the record season in 2020 when there were 30 named storms. The scientists say there could be 13 to 20 named storms this year with 6 to 10 being hurricanes and perhaps 3 to 5 reaching category 3 status or above.
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And on the other side of the continent, severe drought, made worse by climate change, is ravaging the West. Heat and shifting weather patterns have also intensified wildfires and sharply reduced water supplies across the Southwest, Pacific Coast, and North Dakota.
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A new study warns of "zombie fires." With a changing climate, fires in northern forests that smolder through winter and erupt again in spring are expected to become more common.
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And now we are seeing climate refugees. Storms, floods, and wildfires, in addition to conflicts, caused the displacement of 40.5 million people around the world in 2020.
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The Chimney Swifts have returned to our area. I hear their twittering throughout the day when I am in the garden and I often hear them in the chimney when I'm sitting in my living room. Swifts around the world often have trouble finding nesting places because of the loss of their preferred habitat, but in Britain, they are getting some help. A product called "bird bricks" is being used in construction projects to provide a safe niche for the birds' nests.
A swift emerging from a bird brick.
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Marine iguana on Floreanna Island in the Galapagos.
The actor Leonardo DiCaprio is teaming with conservation groups in an effort to rewild the Galapagos Islands and other Pacific islands in Latin America. DiCaprio has pledged $43 million to the campaign to conserve the islands. One of the projects that the money will fund is the restoration of Floreanna Island, home to 54 threatened species. They will reintroduce thirteen locally extinct species including the Floreanna Mockingbird, the first mockingbird described by Charles Darwin in his exploration of the islands.
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The famed arch before its collapse.
On Thursday a group of scientists urged the Biden administration to restore legal protections for gray wolves, saying their removal earlier this year was premature and that states are allowing too many of the animals to be killed. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service dropped wolves in most of the lower 48 states from the endangered species list in January. The decision was among more than 100 actions the previous administration took related to the environment that President Joe Biden ordered reviewed after taking office.
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