Story in current issue of National Wildlife magazine about the mysterious decline of moose in Minnesota and New Hampshire. |
Illustration accompanying story of moose decline in National Wildlife magazine. The causes may be a mix of ticks and brain worms, aggravated by milder winters. |
Global warming could rob Minnesota of not just its iconic loons, but also its moose. And ,it could end the storied island life of wolves in Lake Superior’s Isle Royale National Park .
A story in the current issue of National Wildlife magazine describes the “deepening mystery” of why the “moose population in northwestern Minnesota has plunged from 4,000 animals to just 100. Moose numbers are declining fast in northeastern Minnesota, too, and as far away as central and southern New Hampshire.”
The story also says that “some biologists believe” global warming “is behind the decline of moose in parts of Minnesota.” Global warming may be working in conjunction with “a triple whammy of parasites, pests and predators.” In New Hampshire, milder winters have already increased tick populations to the point where they are draining all the blood out of moose. Less snow cover also draws in more deer, and with them comes an increase in a brain worm that causes moose to “start walking in circles or just stand around until they become prey or die.”
The opposite is true on Isle Royale where there are no deer and therefore no brain worm. There also soon may be no more wolves, which depend on the lake freezing periodically to allow wolves to walk to and from the mainland, to avoid inbreeding. During the past 17 years, a “news of the wild” story in the magazine reads, “ice bridges formed only three times…As a result researchers have tallied the lowest number of wolves ever—an average of fewer than nine yearly during the past three years (the population typically fluctuates between 18 and 27 animals).”
The study of wolves on this island is now in its 56th year. The study had found long ago that wolves maintain a healthy moose population. Now moose kills by wolves have dropped to a record low and the moose population has doubled, to about 1,050, threatening the forest on the island, including the balsam fir that is the main food source for moose, demonstrating once again why healthy wolves are crucial to moose survival.
(Sidebar to article in Audubon magazine, listing loons as one of 314 bird species threatened by global warming.)
My copy of the October/November issue of the National Wildlife Federation's National Wildlife magazine arrived in the mail the day after I received Audubon magazine which said, "Minnesota will likely have no more loons in summer by the end of the century."
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