Disappearing Ice Means New Ways of Life for Arctic Birds

Arctic seabirds are adapting as climate change brings warmer weather, shifting food sources, and a polar bear invasion.

It鈥檚 that time of year again: crisp air,聽pumpkin聽lattes, sweaters, and, of course, our annual reminder that the world is gradually聽getting warmer. At the beginning of each fall,聽when the Arctic's ice is done聽melting from the summer heat, the National Snow & Ice Data Center announces how much聽ice remains (what's called its聽minimum annual extent). According to this year's announcement, 聽on September 10, its lowest point for the year.聽That figure, based on preliminary data, ties this year with 2007 for the second-lowest minimum on record. (For comparison: Between 1979 and 2000, the average minimum was 2.59 million square miles, and the record low was set in 2012 with 1.32 million square miles of ice cover.)

While the announcement of the 聽serves as a clear聽visual reminder of the earth's聽warming temperatures,聽for Arctic wildlife, the picture is more complex. All summer long, the melting ice edge unleashes a rich food source when trapped algae encounters sun-warm water for the first times in months. The resulting algae bloom attracts zooplankton, and then small fish, bigger fish, and top predators such as聽whales, seals, and seabirds. , to which birds are adapting and adjusting鈥攕ome better than others. Here鈥檚 how four birds are finding new ways to survive as the icescape around them becomes increasingly unpredictable.

Mandt鈥檚 Black Guillemot

Mandt鈥檚 Black Guillemots are ice specialists. The birds (pictured above, and a subspecies of the widespread聽Black Guillemot) roost along the ice edge in the high Arctic, diving for Arctic cod鈥斺攁nd even plucking the fish from cracks in the pack ice.聽

But because Arctic cod prefer cold water, they鈥檙e now out of reach鈥攖oo far north or too deep in the water column鈥攚hen chicks at Cooper Island on the northern tip of Alaska hatch in the summer. So Mandt鈥檚 Black Guillemot parents聽feed their chicks whatever they can聽catch, and聽that often聽means sculpin, a froglike聽fish that's followed warm water north. Sculpin are bigger than cod, and chicks struggled to swallow their new food at first. Some even choked to death. But guillemot parents seem to be learning. They now bring back smaller sculpin that chicks can swallow. 鈥淲e were very surprised this past year to have some nests have parents really specialize in sculpin and the chicks have rather decent growth rates,鈥 says George Divoky, who鈥檚 monitored the birds with the non-profit 聽since the 1970s.

As the birds adapt to new food, they must also contend with subarctic invaders moving north as the climate warms. In the 1970s, Divoky noticed Horned Puffins checking out Cooper Island from above, and by the 1980s, the birds had started nesting among the guillemots鈥攁nd even ousting them. 鈥淭hey started going into the guillemot nests and displacing the eggs and killing the young,鈥 he says. In 2009, they killed nearly half of the guillemot chicks in the colony. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e a real climate change signal. It鈥檚 good news for the Horned Puffins, but not for the Black Guillemots.鈥

Ivory Gull

Ivory Gulls聽are the most northerly breeding birds in the world and the only ones known to nest directly on sea ice鈥攊ncluding聽. They聽聽to hunt for Arctic cod and small invertebrates that gather there in the summertime bloom.

As sea ice declines,聽; their Canadian breeding population shrunk from 2,400 birds in 1987 to 700 birds in 2003, when the most recent survey was completed. The species is listed as endangered in Canada and near threatened on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List.

Because they live far from people, it鈥檚 hard to say how the population fares overall. But scientists鈥 predictions aren鈥檛 good. 鈥淚vory Gulls are so highly specialized that it鈥檚 hard to see what they would do to survive in an ice-free Arctic,鈥澛燚ivoky says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e now dealing with an ice environment that鈥檚 very atypical compared to what they鈥檝e had to deal with for the last 10,000 years or so.鈥

Thick-billed Murre

Thick-billed Murres聽play the long game. Each May, when they arrive at Coats Island聽to breed, Hudson Bay is frozen solid around them. The patient parents-to-be will then wait for the ice to melt, and only once open water is exposed nearby do they lay a single egg, finally confident that they can catch enough food to feed their chick. If the聽water never appears, they fly off without breeding,聽set on聽returning聽and trying again the following spring at the only colony聽they've nested at for their entire lives.

Like聽Mandt鈥檚 Black Guillemots, Coats Island murres have seen Arctic cod vanish from their summer diets. Since the mid-1990s, Thick-billed Murre parents at Coats Island instead stuff聽their chicks with capelin, a warmer-water fish, 鈥渨hich they do perfectly well on, but it seems like they don鈥檛 do quite as well,鈥 says Tony Gaston, senior research scientist emeritus with Environment and Climate Change Canada who studied Coats Island murres for 30 years. 鈥淭he chicks are not growing as fast.鈥

Farther north, Thick-billed Murres stand to benefit from changes in Arctic ice. At Prince Leopold Island, a colony 800 miles north of Coats Island, ice occasionally聽perseveres throughout the cold summer and prevents the birds from breeding at all. That will change as the Arctic warms. 鈥淎s those years become less frequent, they will have more breeding years,鈥 Gaston says. 鈥淪o things are probably improving for the birds in the high Arctic.鈥

Such聽improvements could apply to聽many bird species in the high Arctic鈥攆or a time, at least. The slow decline of well-studied nesting colonies might聽look like loss, but for the most part,聽populations are merely聽shifting. Many species will simply move north to stay within their preferred climates鈥攁 strategy that聽can only work for so long. , and the birds can鈥檛 move north forever. 鈥淓ventually it falls off the edge of the world,鈥 Gaston says. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 worry about Thick-billed Murres. I think they鈥檒l hang on long after we鈥檙e gone.鈥

Common Eider

Unlike colony-nesting seabirds, Common Eiders don鈥檛 deliver food to their聽chicks鈥攖hey bring the聽chicks to the food. Just a few days after hatching, eider ducklings follow their parents into open water so they can dive for mollusks on the seafloor. Even after feasting all summer, tragedy can strike during particularly cold winters. When the birds鈥 feeding areas freeze over, thousands of eiders聽have little choice but to crowd into the remaining small patches of open water. Beneath that water, food is quickly depleted,聽and when no other feeding areas are聽available, Common Eider populations can starve en masse. The loss of Arctic ice is expected to benefit their population: The less ice聽and the more water聽available, the better.

However, declining ice also means eider colonies will see more polar bears. The聽Arctic predator typically聽uses the sea ice edge as a platform to hunt seals, but the ice's聽early retreat leaves the bears with聽less time to hunt big prey. As a result,聽polar bears聽have resorted聽to scavenging for less nutritious food on land, which includes聽bird eggs. Polar bear visits to the biggest Common Eider colony in the Canadian Arctic , and at smaller colonies, .

Polar bears gladly raid any聽seabird colonies within reach, including Thick-billed Murres at Coats Island and Mandt鈥檚 Black Guillemots on Cooper Island. Gaston鈥檚 intensive聽monitoring of聽birds at Coats Island has ended after 30 years because the bears are too dangerous. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 risk relatively inexperienced students in this kind of situation,鈥 he says. 聽

While the bears do more damage to colonies of ground-nesting species like Common Eiders, those birds may prove to be more adaptable. 聽and聽moving closer to the safety of human settlement鈥攕omething murres and guillemots are unlikely to do. Those bird species instinctively nest in the same colony year after year. But their chicks, once grown, may take note of the bears and move elsewhere.聽Gaston thinks聽first-time murre parents born on Coats Island are already relocating farther north. 鈥淲hat evidence we have suggests that the colony has started to diminish,鈥 he says, and he mostly blames the bears for that.