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Herring porpoises and other seabirds risk losing both eggs and young in prolonged heat waves.
In a study on Stora Karlsö, on some occasions over 47 degrees were measured in the sun.
– We saw several children who died in the heat, says Agnes Olin at SLU.
Seabirds often nest on rocks and beaches, without the cooling protection of, for example, trees. This also applies on Stora Karlsö outside Gotland, in the largest herring grizzly colony in the Baltic Sea.
The area was affected by heat waves at the end of June in both 2020 and 2022. According to a study from the Swedish University of Agriculture (SLU), it was on some occasions over 47 degrees hot in the direct sunlight on the rocks.
“Very sensitive”
It caused adult birds to seek refuge in the cooling sea – with dire consequences for chicks and eggs, which were left in the sun or risked being accidentally kicked off the rocks.
– Chicks and eggs are very sensitive if they are left alone in the sun, says Agnes Olin, who is a researcher at SLU.
– We didn’t think it would be that bad. But during the heat wave in 2020, we saw that just over a fifth of the breeding attempts that were underway then failed. So that’s a pretty significant part.
Bigger factor
The herring piglets on Stora Karlsö have otherwise had a positive development in recent decades, partly thanks to reduced threats from environmental toxins.
However, the extreme and prolonged heat waves are expected to increase in line with the ongoing climate changes. According to the researchers, this could have serious consequences for seabirds both in the Baltic Sea and elsewhere.
– A heat wave now and then is probably not a major problem for the population at large. But we know that the heat waves will come more often and be more intense, says Agnes Olin.
– So it will become a bigger and bigger factor and can absolutely affect the population going forward.
Facts
Guillemot
The herring piglet is a species in the alcove bird family.
In Sweden, herring porpoises breed mainly on the Karlsöarna off Gotland, but also in other places in the Baltic Sea and on Halland’s Väderö.
The largest colony is on Stora Karlsö. Over 20,000 pairs of herring piglets breed there every year.
Each pair lays one egg per season and helps to incubate and feed the young.
The herring porpoises in the Baltic Sea have had a positive development in the last 15 years with a sharply increasing number. This is likely due to reduced threats from environmental spending, oil spills and fishing gear.
Source: SLU and the World Wildlife Fund
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