PDA

View Full Version : Moose Die-Off Alarms Scientists



skibum
10-15-2013, 02:27 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/15/science/earth/something-is-killing-off-the-moose.html?src=mv&pagewanted=print


Moose Die-Off Alarms Scientists By JIM ROBBINS (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/jim_robbins/index.html)


CHOTEAU, Mont. — Across North America — in places as far-flung as Montana and British Columbia, New Hampshire and Minnesota — moose populations are in steep decline. And no one is sure why.

Twenty years ago, Minnesota had two geographically separate moose populations. One of them has virtually disappeared since the 1990s, declining to fewer than 100 from 4,000.

The other population, in northeastern Minnesota, is dropping 25 percent a year and is now fewer than 3,000, down from 8,000. (The moose mortality rate used to be 8 percent to 12 percent a year.) As a result, wildlife officials have suspended all moose hunting.
Here in Montana, moose hunting permits fell to 362 last year, from 769 in 1995.

“Something’s changed,” said Nicholas DeCesare, a biologist with the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks who is counting moose in this part of the state — one of numerous efforts across the continent to measure and explain the decline. “There’s fewer moose out there, and hunters are working harder to find them.”
What exactly has changed remains a mystery. Several factors are clearly at work. But a common thread in most hypotheses is climate change.

Winters have grown substantially shorter across much of the moose’s range. In New Hampshire, a longer fall with less snow has greatly increased the number of winter ticks, a devastating parasite. “You can get 100,000 ticks on a moose,” said Kristine Rines, a biologist with the state’s Fish and Game Department.

In Minnesota, the leading culprits are brain worms and liver flukes. Both spend part of their life cycles in snails, which thrive in moist environments.

Another theory is heat stress. Moose are made for cold weather, and when the temperature rises above 23 degrees Fahrenheit in winter, as has happened more often in recent years, they expend extra energy to stay cool. That can lead to exhaustion and death.
In the Cariboo Mountains of British Columbia, a recent study pinned the decline of moose on the widespread killing of forest by an epidemic of pine bark beetles, which seem to thrive in warmer weather. The loss of trees left the moose exposed to human and animal predators.

In Smithers, British Columbia, in April, a moose — starving and severely infested with ticks — wandered into the flower section of a Safeway market. It was euthanized.

Unregulated hunting may also play a role in moose mortality. So may wolves in Minnesota and the West.
Scientists and officials say other factors could still emerge. Because most moose die in the fall, the next few months may provide insight.

“It’s complicated because there’s so many pieces of this puzzle that could be impacted by climate change,” said Erika Butler, until recently the wildlife veterinarian at the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

The stakes go beyond the moose themselves. The animals are ecosystem engineers; when they browse shrubs, for example, they create habitat for some nesting birds.

And moose contribute to the economy. In New Hampshire, for instance, moose-watching tourism is a $115-million-a-year business, according to Ms. Rines. Hunting permits also generate revenue.

Moose deaths are hard to study, scientists say. The moose is a member of the deer family, but unlike deer it is a solitary animal that does not run in herds, so it can be hard to track. Moreover, moose have such high levels of body fat that they decompose rapidly; after 24 hours, a necropsy has little value.

In January, Minnesota started an unusual $1.2 million study using advanced monitoring technology to find moose as soon as they die. Live animals are captured and fitted with collars that give their location every 15 minutes, and they are given feed containing a tiny transmitter that remains in the body and monitors heart rate and temperature. Then the moose are released back into the wild.
“If the heart stops beating, it sends a text message to our phone that says, ‘I’m dead at x and y coordinates,’ ” said Dr. Butler, who leads the study. The messages are monitored around the clock; when a moose dies, a team on call rushes to the scene by car or helicopter.

The winter tick problem in New Hampshire is particularly vexing. The animals lose so much blood they can become anemic. Worse, the ticks drive the moose crazy; they constantly scratch, tearing off large patches of hair.
Some moose lose so much hair they look pale, even spectral; some people call them “ghost moose.” When it rains in the spring, the moose, deprived of their warm coats, then become hypothermic.

Winter ticks hatch in the fall and begin to climb aboard their host. They are dormant until January or February, when they start to feed, molt into adults and then drop off.

Moose spend a lot of time feeding in lakes, but wading in water doesn’t drown the ticks, which form an air bubble that allows them to survive immersion in water.

New Hampshire’s winter tick problem is a relatively recent phenomenon. But then, so are moose. The animals were hunted out of existence during Colonial times; they returned to the state only in the 1970s.

While deer have evolved to an ecological balance with ticks, moose have not.

Deer are grooming animals, so they are able to keep tick numbers fairly low. By contrast, said Ms. Rines, the biologist, “moose didn’t evolve with ticks, and they don’t groom them off.” That has led to swarms of ticks.

The solution to the tick problem might be, paradoxically, more moose hunting. “It’s up to the public,” she said. “We could kill more if we want healthy moose.”

adriaticum
10-15-2013, 03:23 PM
Good article, thanks!

Jagermeister
10-15-2013, 03:53 PM
The host for the brain worms is the whitetail deer which the worms seem to have no effect on. With the expanding populations of whitetail into areas where they were otherwise non-existant has put them into contact with mule deer, elk and moose. Mule deer, elk and moose do not have the immunity to these parasites that the whitetail appear to have. This is really no new revelation as I read about it at least 30 years ago. The problem is that with the increase in whitetail numbers, so goes the odds for increased exposure to the mule deer, elk and moose.

r106
10-15-2013, 03:58 PM
The host for the brain worms is the whitetail deer which the worms seem to have no effect on. With the expanding populations of whitetail into areas where they were otherwise non-existant has put them into contact with mule deer, elk and moose. Mule deer, elk and moose do not have the immunity to these parasites that the whitetail appear to have. This is really no new revelation as I read about it at least 30 years ago. The problem is that with the increase in whitetail numbers, so goes the odds for increased exposure to the mule deer, elk and moose.

No idea if thats true or not but the timing seems right. For BC anyway

.300WSMImpact!
10-15-2013, 04:06 PM
The host for the brain worms is the whitetail deer which the worms seem to have no effect on. With the expanding populations of whitetail into areas where they were otherwise non-existant has put them into contact with mule deer, elk and moose. Mule deer, elk and moose do not have the immunity to these parasites that the whitetail appear to have. This is really no new revelation as I read about it at least 30 years ago. The problem is that with the increase in whitetail numbers, so goes the odds for increased exposure to the mule deer, elk and moose.

I am no biologist or scientist, but I am sure there is not more whitetail in Minnesota now then there was 30 years ago,

Stone Sheep Steve
10-15-2013, 04:19 PM
I am no biologist or scientist, but I am sure there is not more whitetail in Minnesota now then there was 30 years ago,

And more wolves.
http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/mammals/wolves/mgmt.html
Minnesota's wolf legacy is unique: its northeastern corner of lakes and sub-boreal forest once sheltered the last remaining wild wolves in the lower 48 states. Wise and careful management under the Endangered Species Act allowed those remaining wolves to flourish and repopulate northern Wisconsin and Michigan's upper peninsula

Anyone see a common theme here???

SSS

gcreek
10-15-2013, 05:40 PM
Climate change my ass! What a great diversion for the wolf huggers to cling to. How do they explain the increase of moose population on the prairies?

I've got a friend in Minnesota that is losing cattle to wolves for them first time this year. I guess they have increased enough to change their diet due to lack of the animal they've killed off.

Jelvis
10-15-2013, 06:11 PM
Invisible wolves?

Stone Sheep Steve
10-15-2013, 07:00 PM
Here's some info on climate change......


Low sunspot activity means Earth chilling until at least 2030
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/10/climate-guru-puts-global-warming-on-ice/#TUyOZlw2KEIqfqwr.99
Far from being the final word on climate change, last week’s United Nations report suggesting near certainty that human activity is causing a rise in Earth’s temperatures is actually further proof that the conventional wisdom is dead wrong and the Earth is cooling right on schedule, according to one of the leading scientists who is skeptical of the climate-change premise.
Last week, the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, reported it was 95 percent certain that climate change was the result of human activity, specifically the burning of fossil fuels that emit “greenhouse gases.”
“That’s the result that they get when you premeditate your science,” said Dr. Tim Ball, former professor of climatology at the University of Winnipeg. “When you set out to establish a certain scientific outcome and you program your computers to do that, you shouldn’t be surprised if that’s the result you get. The problem is what they’re getting out of their computers is not fitting with what’s actually happening. Of course, that’s been the problem with the IPCC all along.”
Ball told WND the deception of the IPCC and its allies can be seen in how the reports are released, with the policy statement drawing headlines while the scientific information comes later and is largely ignored.
“(The summary for policymakers) is a document written to scare to public and scare the politicians into providing more funding for their own research and their own political agenda,” he said. “The actual science report, which it supposedly is based on isn’t going to be released right away. They’ve always done it his way because the summary for policymakers completely disagrees with what the science report is saying. They know that the media and the public are not going to read the science report. And they also know that if any of them get into it, they won’t understand it anyway.”
The latest data actually show temperatures have dropped in recent years. The IPCC and other scientists have branded this as a “pause” in climate change. Ball said that characterization implies that temperatures are temporarily holding steady and will inevitably rise again soon. He said that conclusion is dead wrong.
“The temperature is going down and has for 17 years while carbon dioxide increases,” Ball said. “According to their hypothesis and model, that’s simply not supposed to happen. Rather than doing what they should do and coming out and saying, ‘Our science is wrong, our models are wrong and we apologize for all the inconvenience we’ve caused you,’ they’re just plowing ahead.”
The long-held contention of those who warn of climate catastrophe is that rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere lead to higher temperatures. So if that belief is incorrect, why are temperatures getting cooler?
“The sun is causing the cooling that’s going on. The sun reached a peak of activity around 2000 and has been declining ever since,” said Ball, who noted that the cooling trend will continue for years to come.
“We’re heading toward what occurred around the year 1800. It was called the Dalton Minimum of low sunspot activities,” he explained. “We certainly are down to that in number of sunspots this year. That means the cooling will continue at least until 2030 and yet the government is preparing for warming, which is outrageous. Some people think that this cycle of sunspot activity and global cooling will take us down to as cold as it was around 1680, which was the nadir of the Little Ice Age.”
More evidence backing up Ball’s position comes from the polar regions. New reports from the National Snow and Ice Data Center suggest Antarctic ice levels are at record highs. Ball said the southern hemisphere has been cooling for some time. He believes the clinching evidence comes from the Arctic Circle.
“This was the year that even one scientist at NASA predicted that the Arctic ice in the summer would be gone completely,” he said. “Well, there’s 60 percent more ice this year than last year and the reason is because of the cooling sun and the cooling temperatures.”
Ball also rejects the contention that climate change brings on more extreme weather events, not just higher temperatures. He said hurricane season was very quiet this year and tornadoes were down as well. He chalked up record high and low temperatures to the jet stream shifting from a west-east flow to more of a north-south line.
The “premeditated” science is a major culprit for the climate-change concerns, according to Ball. But he also blames the media.
“The main reason they were able to get away with what they’ve gotten away with is that a majority of the mainstream media were complicit in what (the IPCC and other scientists) were doing,” Ball said. “This is where the Founding Fathers have been corrupted because they believed the media would be the watchdogs, the gatekeepers. The mainstream media have failed completely.”

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/10/climate-guru-puts-global-warming-on-ice/#TUyOZlw2KEIqfqwr.99

Jagermeister
10-15-2013, 07:14 PM
Could be that the Minnesota moose ate themselves out of groceries. Something similar to what is transpiring in one of the National parks in Quebec. The moose are annihilating the habitat there to the point where it is affecting various bird species populations by degradating the nesting habitat.
Some biologists think that the birds are indicators of other underlying conditions yet to surface.
Maybe the moose in New Hampshire, Minnesota and Montana are dying off because they are being studied to death, like getting constipated because their bowels are plugged with tiny transmitters.

Jelvis
10-15-2013, 07:21 PM
Tired of blaming wolves and natives for the past ten years for the decrease in moose cuz no one can believe that anyways, so now it's some extreme weird scientific puzzle, maybe planetary visitors secretly operating on the moose and making them sterile? This wood go over easier than the other two excuses lol.
Jel .. yah I guess we should really figure out the real reason why now. lol

HarryToolips
10-15-2013, 07:24 PM
Interesting article, thanks for posting skibum, any other cases of the ticks showing up in BC other than the supermarket moose anyone know??

Jagermeister
10-15-2013, 07:30 PM
SSS' post
Here's some info on climate change......

is not in line with the Henny Penny global warming crowd who like to attack anyone that presents an opposing argument.
Science is big business, just like environmentalism. The more you can advance your side, be they right or wrong, the more money you get to support your endeavours from government and private foundations. Eventually, the truth will be exposed but not before time and money have been wasted chasing the intangible.
Back to moose. I wonder if the Scandinavian countries' moose are suffering the same population decline?

Jagermeister
10-15-2013, 07:44 PM
http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/global-warming-fears-norway-s-moose-population-in-trouble-for-belching-a-501145.html
and back to the wolves.
http://www1.nina.no/RovviltPub/pdf/Examensarbete%20-%20Tomas%20Bernelind.pdf

daycort
10-15-2013, 08:05 PM
Grizzly bears love moose meat. I wonder how the decline in moose population here in bc (if there is) has to do with a expanding grizzly population.

horshur
10-15-2013, 08:22 PM
should a scientist be alarmed about anything??????

.300WSMImpact!
10-15-2013, 08:27 PM
Tired of blaming wolves and natives for the past ten years for the decrease in moose cuz no one can believe that anyways, so now it's some extreme weird scientific puzzle, maybe planetary visitors secretly operating on the moose and making them sterile? This wood go over easier than the other two excuses lol.
Jel .. yah I guess we should really figure out the real reason why now. lol

jel has it right, wolves and natives

Jelvis
10-15-2013, 08:39 PM
Never heard of a moose scientist b4 lol.
Why now all of a sudden. Hahahahahahaha must need money for research.
Shoulda been studying this when the decline started not wait til there gone.
I guess like the pine beetle they just can't stop it.
The Dodo bird is gone too.
Jel .. What wood scooby doo do?

40incher
10-15-2013, 09:58 PM
The sky is falling ... Yup!

skibum
10-16-2013, 09:05 AM
In regards to the climate change theory.

I personally think we humans think in a too narrow time frame. What has happened in the last 5 or ten years. Natural cycle are (just guessing) 20 years. Moose populations dive for five years and we freak out. I know we should be concerned and it sucks to see the moose population drop, but there is nothing we can do if some parasite is going through a population boom cycle and knocking the moose down. The cycle will end and the population will moose population will increase again.

We try and keep the animals at the winter carrying capacity, but really how easy is that to manage year after year?

No one has mentioned the unregulated hunting line in the story.

As for wolves - need to knock them back.

Jagermeister
10-16-2013, 10:32 AM
Never heard of a moose scientist b4 lol.
Why now all of a sudden. Hahahahahahaha must need money for research.
Shoulda been studying this when the decline started not wait til there gone.
I guess like the pine beetle they just can't stop it.
The Dodo bird is gone too.
Jel .. What wood scooby doo do?
Where have you been?
The most reknown authority on moose was the late Dr. Tony Bubinek. From the Scandinavian countries, to Alaska and Newfoundland and other parts of Canada including BC. He was the man responsibile for convincing the local biologist to implement the successful moose management strategies in Region 7 Omenica.