Tough to keep denying global warming, you'd think.
Walruses crushed in routs
Global warming is linked to deaths on the Russian side of the Bering Strait.
By DAN JOLING
The Associated Press
In what some scientists see as another alarming consequence of global warming, thousands of Pacific walruses above the Arctic Circle were killed in stampedes earlier this year after the disappearance of sea ice caused them to crowd onto the shoreline in extraordinary numbers.
The deaths took place during the late summer and fall on the Russian side of the Bering Strait, which separates Alaska from Russia.
"It was a pretty sobering year -- tough on walruses," said Joel Garlach-Miller, a walrus expert for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Unlike seals, walruses cannot swim indefinitely. The giant, tusked mammals typically clamber onto the sea ice to rest, or haul themselves onto land for just a few weeks at a time.
1 comment:
This is nothing short of tragic. Closer to home here in the states, the Staten Island Advance reports the following:
Dozens of dead birds suddenly appeared on streets in the Great Kills section of Staten Island this afternoon, frightening residents and sparking a large response from emergency officials.
Police sources at the scene initially suspect the birds -- approximately 20 to 30, mostly on Wiman Street near Sweetwater Avenue -- were killed by the effects of a large pile of mulch or compost in the vicinity giving off an ammonia-type smell.
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