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Can corals be saved?

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Friday, April 26, 2024

Can corals be saved?As record ocean heat threatens corals off Florida and across the globe, conservationists are shifting their strategyWarning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best experience.In Florida, swaths of coral paint a colorful landscape across the ocean floor and serve a key role in its ecosystem.But last summer, amid the longest marine heat wave in decades, many were scorched — drained of color and their survival left in question. It’s a scenario becoming much more common.KEY LARGO, Fla.With milk crates of corals in hand and scuba tanks strapped to their backs, Sam Burrell and his team disappeared under the water’s choppy surface. Heavy, breaking waves crashed against the charter boat anchored miles off the coast.With each breath they let out, they descended beneath the surface and felt a sense of relief: On this November morning, they were finally returning hundreds of corals pulled out of the water earlier in the year after one of the hottest marine heat waves on record threatened to wipe them out. For months, the corals sat in temperature-controlled tanks in the shadow of the gulf’s bay until the waters were cool enough for them to go back — and though conditions weren’t ideal, this was that moment.“Returning these corals felt a bit like a loved one leaving the hospital,” said Burrell, a senior reef restoration associate at the Coral Restoration Foundation, the largest nonprofit coral restoration group in the Florida Keys.The afternoon sun was reflecting off the boat, but sand and other sediment made it look like the divers were swimming through a dark cloud. The underwater current pulled at them. Still, nothing could deter them from the day’s task.Groups like Burrell’s had been prepared to do whatever it took to save the corals — even if that meant evacuating them each summer. But they now realize they need to radically shift their approach.With record ocean temperatures threatening another dire summer, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and coral restoration groups are shifting their efforts to better keep up with the warming climate. The goal is clear: Find the survivors from last summer’s heat wave and focus on restoring areas where the species will have the best chance when heat strikes again.The CRF team places the rescued corals on a 'coral tree' in the middle of the ocean where the scientists will monitor them before replanting them on a reef. How they execute the new plan could mean the difference between saving what’s left on Florida’s 360-mile-long coral reef and another summer of catastrophic loss. Already, some coral experts have questioned how far humans will go to keep corals alive in an environment that struggles to sustain them. At risk is the very future of these corals, a species that serves as an underwater city to more than 7,000 other marine plants and animals, survived prehistoric mass extinctions and outlived the dinosaurs. The collapse of coral in the Keys would also have an economic ripple effect: Thousands of people could lose jobs related to a key part of regional tourism.Corals thrive in water temperatures between 73 and 84 degrees Fahrenheit, according to NOAA. But last summer, shallow-water temperatures in the lower Keys reached a walloping 101 degrees Fahrenheit. Other places simmered in the mid to high 90-degree range.While the coral reefs along Florida's coastline have seen a 90 percent decline in the past 40 years, there are still sections of healthy coral. Florida is home to the third-largest reef in the world. Iconic sites along the reef have experienced a 90 percent decline in the past 40 years due to human-caused climate change, damaging hurricanes, disease and recreational activities.As bleaching events increase in severity and frequency, it becomes harder for certain corals to bounce back. Last summer, corals in the Keys endured the hottest ocean temperatures on record, according to NOAA’s Mission: Iconic Reefs, a coalition of public and private groups. This heat streak has lasted more than a year: NOAA and the International Coral Reef Initiative just confirmed bleaching-level heat stress in every corner of the ocean.Robyn Mast, a Key West reef restoration associate at CRF, recalled an emotional scene when she saw the havoc last year’s heat wrought on the species. Entire stretches looked like they were covered in a fresh layer of snow. The corals, full of color just days before, were bleached. As she dove closer, she realized many of the colorful coral left were burned to death: They had died so quickly that they didn’t even have the chance for color to drain. Temperatures were so hot that coral tissue melted from its skeleton.A marine heatwave over the summer threatened the health of the invertebrates that serve crucial roles in oceanic ecosystems. As Earth’s oceans warm, many coral reefs are in danger of bleaching, which indicates the coral is starting to starve.“You spend so much time [in the ocean] that it kind of becomes a second home,” Mast said. “And when you go under the water and see your home like a house fire, and there’s just really nothing left … it’s hard to process.”Many experts were stunned by the quick onslaught of the marine heat wave and how early in the season it occurred. Temperatures were so warm that NOAA added three new bleaching alert levels.When corals are stressed, they release their algae and turn pale or white. A bleached coral doesn’t mean that the coral is dead, but that the coral is starting to starve — and last year, many corals in the Keys starved for three straight months.The Coral Restoration Foundation team prepares to return the coral fragments to the in-water restoration site. NOAA’s restorative teams and coral groups across Florida felt then that they had no choice but to move thousands of corals to land. Now, they plan to focus on the heat-resilient coral survivors from last summer: boulder corals, a bumpy rocklike coral. Despite bleaching almost entirely in the U.S. Virgin Islands, boulder coral have made a full recovery, said Jennifer Koss, the director of NOAA’s coral reef conservation program.Coral groups outplant coral to help rebuild reef coverage by taking small bits of coral pieces from living coral grown in nurseries and reattaching it to the reef.Previously, restoration groups chose not to prioritize outplanting boulder coral because it took them longer to grow, and they were more susceptible to diseases. Instead, they prioritized staghorn coral, which resemble skinny deer antlers, and elkhorn coral, which look like thick moose antlers. These corals can grow quickly and can asexually form new colonies if broken up. But they are very heat sensitive.According to recent NOAA data, less than 22 percent of 1,500 outplanted staghorn coral across five restoration sites survived the marine heat wave. Staghorn coral outplants only survived in the two most northern sites where temperatures remained the coolest. Nearly 4.9 percent of outplanted elkhorn coral remain alive. Researchers found no living staghorn or elkhorn corals in one of the southernmost reefs, where temperatures were the warmest.When scientists from the Coral Restoration Foundation saw coral dying over the summer, they worked to remove thousands of coral and safely keep them in tanks on land until they could be returned to the nursery.Now, it will be up to the boulder and other heat-resilient individual corals to be the parents of the next generation, Koss said.“This has been sort of a Darwinian event in terms of the corals that are left out there,” Koss said.As of November, there were similar levels of coral mortality at Pickle’s Reef, an in-water restoration site off the coast of Key Largo. A dive under the water’s surface revealed scars from the heat wave still mark the bottom of the ocean. Miles of the seafloor — lined with thickets of dull staghorn and elkhorn corals — resembled brown, dirty carpeting. Schools of fish with stunning patterns and vivid colors stood in stark contrast against lifeless coral.“It’s pretty sad because you put all this time and effort into planting these corals and then you show up the next year, and they’re no longer alive,” Burrell said.CRF outplanted over 800 staghorn and elkhorn corals at Pickles Reef in 2023. After last year’s heat wave, more than 90 percent of the outplanted corals at Pickles Reef had died.At Pickles Reef, the coral tags are a reminder of where the Coral Restoration Foundation outplanted over 1,600 coral. Most of the corals are dead now. Restoration groups don’t plan to completely abandon staghorn and elkhorn corals, they are just taking a pause after losing so many last summer. CRF also plans to move nurseries to deeper, cooler water and is experimenting with different shading techniques.Not all locations along the Florida coral reef track warmed equally. While some areas simmered, others experienced moderate impacts. NOAA and coral restoration groups plan to take advantage of the temperature patchwork to identify habitats that can withstand heat stress for future restoration efforts.“We don’t want to go through all the effort of creating new corals and new coral tissue, and put it right into a spot where we know it’s likely to get hammered again,” Koss said.Sam Burrell of the Coral Restoration Foundation takes a large piece of coral down to their coral reef nursery off the coast of Key Largo, Fla.; Burrell works at the reef site called Pickles off the coast of Key Largo; and staff members of the Coral Restoration Foundation work at the same reef site, Pickles.If corals are abandoned, some groups worry, it could hurt the livelihoods of the people who rely on them. For Steven Campbell, a diving boat captain in Key Largo, news of severe marine bleaching took a toll. Nearly every time the phone rang after the heat wave began, he said it was a group canceling a dive trip.Campbell, who’s been a dive instructor and boat captain there for 22 years, questions whether last year’s bleaching was an anomaly or a sign of climate change’s rapid intensification. But, pockets of resilience on outer reefs leave him optimistic. “I’m the kind of guy who, I live my life with my cup half full,” he said.Still, some coral experts question whether current restoration practices are feasible long-term.A large elkhorn struggles to survive after the Florida Keys experienced one of the hottest marine heatwaves on record in 2023. Terry Hughes, a professor of marine biology at James Cook University, thinks restoration practices only produce small scale interventions that fall flat, and may even be counterproductive.“If we look at the evidence, from 50 years or so of coral restoration projects throughout the tropics, they have made very little difference. You could argue that they offer false hope and distract attention from addressing the root causes of coral reef decline,” Hughes said. “It’s an appealing message — that clever coral reef scientists can climate-proof reefs. Unfortunately, we cannot.”It’s “logical” to outplant adapting coral, Hughes added, “since the alternative is to outplant dead corals that didn’t survive.”Emma Thomson of the Coral Restoration Foundation and staff members work among dead coral at Pickles reef site as fish swim pass them. Dead elkhorn coral is seen at Horseshoe, near Elbow Reef off the coast of Key Largo.Other coral experts think surviving corals should be allowed to adapt with less human intervention.“We can’t shield corals from the changing conditions in the water,” said Michael Webster, a professor in New York University’s department of environmental studies who has studied coral reefs for nearly 30 years.Researchers at CRF believe corals should be in the ocean as much as possible, Burrell said, but say it’s their duty to protect corals from conditions that are too extreme. “We’re their guardians essentially.”It’s still too early to predict what this summer will hold, but the threat of another devastating marine heat wave looms. Leaders at NOAA have already observed premature heat beginning to accumulate in the ocean.The sun sets over Elbow Reef near Key Largo.About this storyThe Washington Post dove underwater in the Florida Keys to report this piece.Photography by Carolyn Van Houten. Photo editing by Olivier Laurent and Amanda Voisard. Video by Whitney Leaming. Video editing by Jessica Koscielniak. Design by Elena Lacey and Hailey Haymond. Design editing by Joe Moore. Text editing by Juliet Eilperin and Paulina Firozi. Copy editing by Dorine Bethea.

How groups execute the new plan could mean the difference between saving what’s left on Florida’s 360-mile-long coral reef and another summer of catastrophic loss.

Can corals be saved?

As record ocean heat threatens corals off Florida and across the globe, conservationists are shifting their strategy

Warning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best experience.

In Florida, swaths of coral paint a colorful landscape across the ocean floor and serve a key role in its ecosystem.

But last summer, amid the longest marine heat wave in decades, many were scorched — drained of color and their survival left in question. It’s a scenario becoming much more common.

KEY LARGO, Fla.

With milk crates of corals in hand and scuba tanks strapped to their backs, Sam Burrell and his team disappeared under the water’s choppy surface. Heavy, breaking waves crashed against the charter boat anchored miles off the coast.

With each breath they let out, they descended beneath the surface and felt a sense of relief: On this November morning, they were finally returning hundreds of corals pulled out of the water earlier in the year after one of the hottest marine heat waves on record threatened to wipe them out. For months, the corals sat in temperature-controlled tanks in the shadow of the gulf’s bay until the waters were cool enough for them to go back — and though conditions weren’t ideal, this was that moment.

“Returning these corals felt a bit like a loved one leaving the hospital,” said Burrell, a senior reef restoration associate at the Coral Restoration Foundation, the largest nonprofit coral restoration group in the Florida Keys.

The afternoon sun was reflecting off the boat, but sand and other sediment made it look like the divers were swimming through a dark cloud. The underwater current pulled at them. Still, nothing could deter them from the day’s task.

Groups like Burrell’s had been prepared to do whatever it took to save the corals — even if that meant evacuating them each summer. But they now realize they need to radically shift their approach.

With record ocean temperatures threatening another dire summer, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and coral restoration groups are shifting their efforts to better keep up with the warming climate. The goal is clear: Find the survivors from last summer’s heat wave and focus on restoring areas where the species will have the best chance when heat strikes again.

The CRF team places the rescued corals on a 'coral tree' in the middle of the ocean where the scientists will monitor them before replanting them on a reef.

How they execute the new plan could mean the difference between saving what’s left on Florida’s 360-mile-long coral reef and another summer of catastrophic loss. Already, some coral experts have questioned how far humans will go to keep corals alive in an environment that struggles to sustain them. At risk is the very future of these corals, a species that serves as an underwater city to more than 7,000 other marine plants and animals, survived prehistoric mass extinctions and outlived the dinosaurs. The collapse of coral in the Keys would also have an economic ripple effect: Thousands of people could lose jobs related to a key part of regional tourism.

Corals thrive in water temperatures between 73 and 84 degrees Fahrenheit, according to NOAA. But last summer, shallow-water temperatures in the lower Keys reached a walloping 101 degrees Fahrenheit. Other places simmered in the mid to high 90-degree range.

While the coral reefs along Florida's coastline have seen a 90 percent decline in the past 40 years, there are still sections of healthy coral.

Florida is home to the third-largest reef in the world. Iconic sites along the reef have experienced a 90 percent decline in the past 40 years due to human-caused climate change, damaging hurricanes, disease and recreational activities.

As bleaching events increase in severity and frequency, it becomes harder for certain corals to bounce back. Last summer, corals in the Keys endured the hottest ocean temperatures on record, according to NOAA’s Mission: Iconic Reefs, a coalition of public and private groups. This heat streak has lasted more than a year: NOAA and the International Coral Reef Initiative just confirmed bleaching-level heat stress in every corner of the ocean.

Robyn Mast, a Key West reef restoration associate at CRF, recalled an emotional scene when she saw the havoc last year’s heat wrought on the species. Entire stretches looked like they were covered in a fresh layer of snow. The corals, full of color just days before, were bleached. As she dove closer, she realized many of the colorful coral left were burned to death: They had died so quickly that they didn’t even have the chance for color to drain. Temperatures were so hot that coral tissue melted from its skeleton.

A marine heatwave over the summer threatened the health of the invertebrates that serve crucial roles in oceanic ecosystems. As Earth’s oceans warm, many coral reefs are in danger of bleaching, which indicates the coral is starting to starve.

“You spend so much time [in the ocean] that it kind of becomes a second home,” Mast said. “And when you go under the water and see your home like a house fire, and there’s just really nothing left … it’s hard to process.”

Many experts were stunned by the quick onslaught of the marine heat wave and how early in the season it occurred. Temperatures were so warm that NOAA added three new bleaching alert levels.

When corals are stressed, they release their algae and turn pale or white. A bleached coral doesn’t mean that the coral is dead, but that the coral is starting to starve — and last year, many corals in the Keys starved for three straight months.

The Coral Restoration Foundation team prepares to return the coral fragments to the in-water restoration site.

NOAA’s restorative teams and coral groups across Florida felt then that they had no choice but to move thousands of corals to land. Now, they plan to focus on the heat-resilient coral survivors from last summer: boulder corals, a bumpy rocklike coral. Despite bleaching almost entirely in the U.S. Virgin Islands, boulder coral have made a full recovery, said Jennifer Koss, the director of NOAA’s coral reef conservation program.

Coral groups outplant coral to help rebuild reef coverage by taking small bits of coral pieces from living coral grown in nurseries and reattaching it to the reef.

Previously, restoration groups chose not to prioritize outplanting boulder coral because it took them longer to grow, and they were more susceptible to diseases. Instead, they prioritized staghorn coral, which resemble skinny deer antlers, and elkhorn coral, which look like thick moose antlers. These corals can grow quickly and can asexually form new colonies if broken up. But they are very heat sensitive.

According to recent NOAA data, less than 22 percent of 1,500 outplanted staghorn coral across five restoration sites survived the marine heat wave. Staghorn coral outplants only survived in the two most northern sites where temperatures remained the coolest. Nearly 4.9 percent of outplanted elkhorn coral remain alive. Researchers found no living staghorn or elkhorn corals in one of the southernmost reefs, where temperatures were the warmest.

When scientists from the Coral Restoration Foundation saw coral dying over the summer, they worked to remove thousands of coral and safely keep them in tanks on land until they could be returned to the nursery.

Now, it will be up to the boulder and other heat-resilient individual corals to be the parents of the next generation, Koss said.

“This has been sort of a Darwinian event in terms of the corals that are left out there,” Koss said.

As of November, there were similar levels of coral mortality at Pickle’s Reef, an in-water restoration site off the coast of Key Largo. A dive under the water’s surface revealed scars from the heat wave still mark the bottom of the ocean. Miles of the seafloor — lined with thickets of dull staghorn and elkhorn corals — resembled brown, dirty carpeting. Schools of fish with stunning patterns and vivid colors stood in stark contrast against lifeless coral.

“It’s pretty sad because you put all this time and effort into planting these corals and then you show up the next year, and they’re no longer alive,” Burrell said.

CRF outplanted over 800 staghorn and elkhorn corals at Pickles Reef in 2023. After last year’s heat wave, more than 90 percent of the outplanted corals at Pickles Reef had died.

At Pickles Reef, the coral tags are a reminder of where the Coral Restoration Foundation outplanted over 1,600 coral. Most of the corals are dead now.

Restoration groups don’t plan to completely abandon staghorn and elkhorn corals, they are just taking a pause after losing so many last summer. CRF also plans to move nurseries to deeper, cooler water and is experimenting with different shading techniques.

Not all locations along the Florida coral reef track warmed equally. While some areas simmered, others experienced moderate impacts. NOAA and coral restoration groups plan to take advantage of the temperature patchwork to identify habitats that can withstand heat stress for future restoration efforts.

“We don’t want to go through all the effort of creating new corals and new coral tissue, and put it right into a spot where we know it’s likely to get hammered again,” Koss said.

Sam Burrell of the Coral Restoration Foundation takes a large piece of coral down to their coral reef nursery off the coast of Key Largo, Fla.; Burrell works at the reef site called Pickles off the coast of Key Largo; and staff members of the Coral Restoration Foundation work at the same reef site, Pickles.

If corals are abandoned, some groups worry, it could hurt the livelihoods of the people who rely on them. For Steven Campbell, a diving boat captain in Key Largo, news of severe marine bleaching took a toll. Nearly every time the phone rang after the heat wave began, he said it was a group canceling a dive trip.

Campbell, who’s been a dive instructor and boat captain there for 22 years, questions whether last year’s bleaching was an anomaly or a sign of climate change’s rapid intensification. But, pockets of resilience on outer reefs leave him optimistic. “I’m the kind of guy who, I live my life with my cup half full,” he said.

Still, some coral experts question whether current restoration practices are feasible long-term.

A large elkhorn struggles to survive after the Florida Keys experienced one of the hottest marine heatwaves on record in 2023.

Terry Hughes, a professor of marine biology at James Cook University, thinks restoration practices only produce small scale interventions that fall flat, and may even be counterproductive.

“If we look at the evidence, from 50 years or so of coral restoration projects throughout the tropics, they have made very little difference. You could argue that they offer false hope and distract attention from addressing the root causes of coral reef decline,” Hughes said. “It’s an appealing message — that clever coral reef scientists can climate-proof reefs. Unfortunately, we cannot.”

It’s “logical” to outplant adapting coral, Hughes added, “since the alternative is to outplant dead corals that didn’t survive.”

Emma Thomson of the Coral Restoration Foundation and staff members work among dead coral at Pickles reef site as fish swim pass them. Dead elkhorn coral is seen at Horseshoe, near Elbow Reef off the coast of Key Largo.

Other coral experts think surviving corals should be allowed to adapt with less human intervention.

“We can’t shield corals from the changing conditions in the water,” said Michael Webster, a professor in New York University’s department of environmental studies who has studied coral reefs for nearly 30 years.

Researchers at CRF believe corals should be in the ocean as much as possible, Burrell said, but say it’s their duty to protect corals from conditions that are too extreme. “We’re their guardians essentially.”

It’s still too early to predict what this summer will hold, but the threat of another devastating marine heat wave looms. Leaders at NOAA have already observed premature heat beginning to accumulate in the ocean.

The sun sets over Elbow Reef near Key Largo.
About this story

The Washington Post dove underwater in the Florida Keys to report this piece.

Photography by Carolyn Van Houten. Photo editing by Olivier Laurent and Amanda Voisard. Video by Whitney Leaming. Video editing by Jessica Koscielniak. Design by Elena Lacey and Hailey Haymond. Design editing by Joe Moore. Text editing by Juliet Eilperin and Paulina Firozi. Copy editing by Dorine Bethea.

Read the full story here.
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Lifesize herd of puppet animals begins climate action journey from Africa to Arctic Circle

The Herds project from the team behind Little Amal will travel 20,000km taking its message on environmental crisis across the worldHundreds of life-size animal puppets have begun a 20,000km (12,400 mile) journey from central Africa to the Arctic Circle as part of an ambitious project created by the team behind Little Amal, the giant puppet of a Syrian girl that travelled across the world.The public art initiative called The Herds, which has already visited Kinshasa and Lagos, will travel to 20 cities over four months to raise awareness of the climate crisis. Continue reading...

Hundreds of life-size animal puppets have begun a 20,000km (12,400 mile) journey from central Africa to the Arctic Circle as part of an ambitious project created by the team behind Little Amal, the giant puppet of a Syrian girl that travelled across the world.The public art initiative called The Herds, which has already visited Kinshasa and Lagos, will travel to 20 cities over four months to raise awareness of the climate crisis.It is the second major project from The Walk Productions, which introduced Little Amal, a 12-foot puppet, to the world in Gaziantep, near the Turkey-Syria border, in 2021. The award-winning project, co-founded by the Palestinian playwright and director Amir Nizar Zuabi, reached 2 million people in 17 countries as she travelled from Turkey to the UK.The Herds’ journey began in Kinshasa’s Botanical Gardens on 10 April, kicking off four days of events. It moved on to Lagos, Nigeria, the following week, where up to 5,000 people attended events performed by more than 60 puppeteers.On Friday the streets of Dakar in Senegal will be filled with more than 40 puppet zebras, wildebeest, monkeys, giraffes and baboons as they run through Médina, one of the busiest neighbourhoods, where they will encounter a creation by Fabrice Monteiro, a Belgium-born artist who lives in Senegal, and is known for his large-scale sculptures. On Saturday the puppets will be part of an event in the fishing village of Ngor.The Herds’ 20,000km journey began in Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Photograph: Berclaire/walk productionsThe first set of animal puppets was created by Ukwanda Puppetry and Designs Art Collective in Cape Town using recycled materials, but in each location local volunteers are taught how to make their own animals using prototypes provided by Ukwanda. The project has already attracted huge interest from people keen to get involved. In Dakar more than 300 artists applied for 80 roles as artists and puppet guides. About 2,000 people will be trained to make the puppets over the duration of the project.“The idea is that we’re migrating with an ever-evolving, growing group of animals,” Zuabi told the Guardian last year.Zuabi has spoken of The Herds as a continuation of Little Amal’s journey, which was inspired by refugees, who often cite climate disaster as a trigger for forced migration. The Herds will put the environmental emergency centre stage, and will encourage communities to launch their own events to discuss the significance of the project and get involved in climate activism.The puppets are created with recycled materials and local volunteers are taught how to make them in each location. Photograph: Ant Strack“The idea is to put in front of people that there is an emergency – not with scientific facts, but with emotions,” said The Herds’ Senegal producer, Sarah Desbois.She expects thousands of people to view the four events being staged over the weekend. “We don’t have a tradition of puppetry in Senegal. As soon as the project started, when people were shown pictures of the puppets, they were going crazy.”Little Amal, the puppet of a Syrian girl that has become a symbol of human rights, in Santiago, Chile on 3 January. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesGrowing as it moves, The Herds will make its way from Dakar to Morocco, then into Europe, including London and Paris, arriving in the Arctic Circle in early August.

Dead, sick pelicans turning up along Oregon coast

So far, no signs of bird flu but wildlife officials continue to test the birds.

Sick and dead pelicans are turning up on Oregon’s coast and state wildlife officials say they don’t yet know why. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife says it has collected several dead brown pelican carcasses for testing. Lab results from two pelicans found in Newport have come back negative for highly pathogenic avian influenza, also known as bird flu, the agency said. Avian influenza was detected in Oregon last fall and earlier this year in both domestic animals and wildlife – but not brown pelicans. Additional test results are pending to determine if another disease or domoic acid toxicity caused by harmful algal blooms may be involved, officials said. In recent months, domoic acid toxicity has sickened or killed dozens of brown pelicans and numerous other wildlife in California. The sport harvest for razor clams is currently closed in Oregon – from Cascade Head to the California border – due to high levels of domoic acid detected last fall.Brown pelicans – easily recognized by their large size, massive bill and brownish plumage – breed in Southern California and migrate north along the Oregon coast in spring. Younger birds sometimes rest on the journey and may just be tired, not sick, officials said. If you find a sick, resting or dead pelican, leave it alone and keep dogs leashed and away from wildlife. State wildlife biologists along the coast are aware of the situation and the public doesn’t need to report sick, resting or dead pelicans. — Gosia Wozniacka covers environmental justice, climate change, the clean energy transition and other environmental issues. Reach her at gwozniacka@oregonian.com or 971-421-3154.Our journalism needs your support. Subscribe today to OregonLive.com.

50-Million-Year-Old Footprints Open a 'Rare Window' Into the Behaviors of Extinct Animals That Once Roamed in Oregon

Scientists revisited tracks made by a shorebird, a lizard, a cat-like predator and some sort of large herbivore at what is now John Day Fossil Beds National Monument

50-Million-Year-Old Footprints Open a ‘Rare Window’ Into the Behaviors of Extinct Animals That Once Roamed in Oregon Scientists revisited tracks made by a shorebird, a lizard, a cat-like predator and some sort of large herbivore at what is now John Day Fossil Beds National Monument Sarah Kuta - Daily Correspondent April 24, 2025 4:59 p.m. Researchers took a closer look at fossilized footprints—including these cat-like tracks—found at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument in Oregon. National Park Service Between 29 million and 50 million years ago, Oregon was teeming with life. Shorebirds searched for food in shallow water, lizards dashed along lake beds and saber-toothed predators prowled the landscape. Now, scientists are learning more about these prehistoric creatures by studying their fossilized footprints. They describe some of these tracks, discovered at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, in a paper published earlier this year in the journal Palaeontologia Electronica. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument is a nearly 14,000-acre, federally protected area in central and eastern Oregon. It’s a well-known site for “body fossils,” like teeth and bones. But, more recently, paleontologists have been focusing their attention on “trace fossils”—indirect evidence of animals, like worm burrows, footprints, beak marks and impressions of claws. Both are useful for understanding the extinct creatures that once roamed the environment, though they provide different kinds of information about the past. “Body fossils tell us a lot about the structure of an organism, but a trace fossil … tells us a lot about behaviors,” says lead author Conner Bennett, an Earth and environmental scientist at Utah Tech University, to Crystal Ligori, host of Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “All Things Considered.” Oregon's prehistoric shorebirds probed for food the same way modern shorebirds do, according to the researchers. Bennett et al., Palaeontologia Electronica, 2025 For the study, scientists revisited fossilized footprints discovered at the national monument decades ago. Some specimens had sat in museum storage since the 1980s. They analyzed the tracks using a technique known as photogrammetry, which involved taking thousands of photographs to produce 3D models. These models allowed researchers to piece together some long-gone scenes. Small footprints and beak marks were discovered near invertebrate trails, suggesting that ancient shorebirds were pecking around in search of a meal between 39 million and 50 million years ago. This prehistoric behavior is “strikingly similar” to that of today’s shorebirds, according to a statement from the National Park Service. “It’s fascinating,” says Bennett in the statement. “That is an incredibly long time for a species to exhibit the same foraging patterns as its ancestors.” Photogrammetry techniques allowed the researchers to make 3D models of the tracks. Bennett et al., Palaeontologia Electronica, 2025 Researchers also analyzed a footprint with splayed toes and claws. This rare fossil was likely made by a running lizard around 50 million years ago, according to the team. It’s one of the few known reptile tracks in North America from that period. An illustration of a nimravid, an extinct, cat-like predator NPS / Mural by Roger Witter They also found evidence of a cat-like predator dating to roughly 29 million years ago. A set of paw prints, discovered in a layer of volcanic ash, likely belonged to a bobcat-sized, saber-toothed predator resembling a cat—possibly a nimravid of the genus Hoplophoneus. Since researchers didn’t find any claw marks on the paw prints, they suspect the creature had retractable claws, just like modern cats do. A set of three-toed, rounded hoofprints indicate some sort of large herbivore was roaming around 29 million years ago, probably an ancient tapir or rhinoceros ancestor. Together, the fossil tracks open “a rare window into ancient ecosystems,” says study co-author Nicholas Famoso, paleontology program manager at the national monument, in the statement. “They add behavioral context to the body fossils we’ve collected over the years and help us better understand the climate and environmental conditions of prehistoric Oregon,” he adds. Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.

Two teens and 5,000 ants: how a smuggling bust shed new light on a booming trade

Two Belgian 19-year-olds have pleaded guilty to wildlife piracy – part of a growing trend of trafficking ‘less conspicuous’ creatures for sale as exotic petsPoaching busts are familiar territory for the officers of Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), an armed force tasked with protecting the country’s iconic creatures. But what awaited guards when they descended in early April on a guesthouse in the west of the country was both larger and smaller in scale than the smuggling operations they typically encounter. There were more than 5,000 smuggled animals, caged in their own enclosures. Each one, however, was about the size of a little fingernail: 18-25mm.The cargo, which two Belgian teenagers had apparently intended to ship to exotic pet markets in Europe and Asia, was ants. Their enclosures were a mixture of test tubes and syringes containing cotton wool – environments that authorities say would keep the insects alive for weeks. Continue reading...

Poaching busts are familiar territory for the officers of Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), an armed force tasked with protecting the country’s iconic creatures. But what awaited guards when they descended in early April on a guesthouse in the west of the country was both larger and smaller in scale than the smuggling operations they typically encounter. There were more than 5,000 smuggled animals, caged in their own enclosures. Each one, however, was about the size of a little fingernail: 18-25mm.The samples of garden ants presented to the court. Photograph: Monicah Mwangi/ReutersThe cargo, which two Belgian teenagers had apparently intended to ship to exotic pet markets in Europe and Asia, was ants. Their enclosures were a mixture of test tubes and syringes containing cotton wool – environments that authorities say would keep the insects alive for weeks.“We did not come here to break any laws. By accident and stupidity we did,” says Lornoy David, one of the Belgian smugglers.David and Seppe Lodewijckx, both 19 years old, pleaded guilty after being charged last week with wildlife piracy, alongside two other men in a separate case who were caught smuggling 400 ants. The cases have shed new light on booming global ant trade – and what authorities say is a growing trend of trafficking “less conspicuous” creatures.These crimes represent “a shift in trafficking trends – from iconic large mammals to lesser-known yet ecologically critical species”, says a KWS statement.The unusual case has also trained a spotlight on the niche world of ant-keeping and collecting – a hobby that has boomed over the past decade. The seized species include Messor cephalotes, a large red harvester ant native to east Africa. Queens of the species grow to about 20-24mm long, and the ant sales website Ants R Us describes them as “many people’s dream species”, selling them for £99 per colony. The ants are prized by collectors for their unique behaviours and complex colony-building skills, “traits that make them popular in exotic pet circles, where they are kept in specialised habitats known as formicariums”, KWS says.Lornoy David and Seppe Lodewijckx during the hearing. Photograph: Monicah Mwangi/ReutersOne online ant vendor, who asked not to be named, says the market is thriving, and there has been a growth in ant-keeping shows, where enthusiasts meet to compare housing and species details. “Sales volumes have grown almost every year. There are more ant vendors than before, and prices have become more competitive,” he says. “In today’s world, where most people live fast-paced, tech-driven lives, many are disconnected from themselves and their environment. Watching ants in a formicarium can be surprisingly therapeutic,” he says.David and Lodewijckx will remain in custody until the court considers a pre-sentencing report on 23 April. The ant seller says theirs is a “landmark case in the field”. “People travelling to other countries specifically to collect ants and then returning with them is virtually unheard of,” he says.A formicarium at a pet shop in Singapore. Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty ImagesScientists have raised concerns that the burgeoning trade in exotic ants could pose a significant biodiversity risk. “Ants are traded as pets across the globe, but if introduced outside of their native ranges they could become invasive with dire environmental and economic consequences,” researchers conclude in a 2023 paper tracking the ant trade across China. “The most sought-after ants have higher invasive potential,” they write.Removing ants from their ecosystems could also be damaging. Illegal exportation “not only undermines Kenya’s sovereign rights over its biodiversity but also deprives local communities and research institutions of potential ecological and economic benefits”, says KWS. Dino Martins, an entomologist and evolutionary biologist in Kenya, says harvester ants are among the most important insects on the African savannah, and any trade in them is bound to have negative consequences for the ecology of the grasslands.A Kenyan official arranges the containers of ants at the court. Photograph: Kenya Wildlife Service/AP“Harvester ants are seed collectors, and they gather [the seeds] as food for themselves, storing these in their nests. A single large harvester ant colony can collect several kilos of seeds of various grasses a year. In the process of collecting grass seeds, the ants ‘drop’ a number … dispersing them through the grasslands,” says Martins.The insects also serve as food for various other species including aardvarks, pangolins and aardwolves.Martins says he is surprised to see that smugglers feeding the global “pet” trade are training their sights on Kenya, since “ants are among the most common and widespread of insects”.“Insect trade can actually be done more sustainably, through controlled rearing of the insects. This can support livelihoods in rural communities such as the Kipepeo Project which rears butterflies in Kenya,” he says. Locally, the main threats to ants come not from the illegal trade but poisoning from pesticides, habitat destruction and invasive species, says Martins.Philip Muruthi, a vice-president for conservation at the African Wildlife Foundation in Nairobi, says ants enrich soils, enabling germination and providing food for other species.“When you see a healthy forest … you don’t think about what is making it healthy. It is the relationships all the way from the bacteria to the ants to the bigger things,” he says.

Belgian Teenagers Found With 5,000 Ants to Be Sentenced in 2 Weeks

Two Belgian teenagers who were found with thousands of ants valued at $9,200 and allegedly destined for European and Asian markets will be sentenced in two weeks

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Two Belgian teenagers who were found with thousands of ants valued at $9,200 and allegedly destined for European and Asian markets will be sentenced in two weeks, a Kenyan magistrate said Wednesday.Magistrate Njeri Thuku, sitting at the court in Kenya’s main airport, said she would not rush the case but would take time to review environmental impact and psychological reports filed in court before passing sentence on May 7.Belgian nationals Lornoy David and Seppe Lodewijckx, both 19 years old, were arrested on April 5 with 5,000 ants at a guest house. They were charged on April 15 with violating wildlife conservation laws.The teens have told the magistrate that they didn’t know that keeping the ants was illegal and were just having fun.The Kenya Wildlife Service had said the case represented “a shift in trafficking trends — from iconic large mammals to lesser-known yet ecologically critical species.”Kenya has in the past fought against the trafficking of body parts of larger wild animals such as elephants, rhinos and pangolins among others.The Belgian teens had entered the country on a tourist visa and were staying in a guest house in the western town of Naivasha, popular among tourists for its animal parks and lakes.Their lawyer, Halima Nyakinyua Magairo, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that her clients did not know what they were doing was illegal. She said she hoped the Belgian embassy in Kenya could “support them more in this judicial process.”In a separate but related case, Kenyan Dennis Ng’ang’a and Vietnamese Duh Hung Nguyen were charged after they were found in possession of 400 ants in their apartment in the capital, Nairobi.KWS had said all four suspects were involved in trafficking the ants to markets in Europe and Asia, and that the species included messor cephalotes, a distinctive, large and red-colored harvester ant native to East Africa.The ants are bought by people who keep them as pets and observe them in their colonies. Several websites in Europe have listed different species of ants for sale at varied prices.The 5,400 ants found with the four men are valued at 1.2 million Kenyan shillings ($9,200), according to KWS.Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Photos You Should See - Feb. 2025

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