Wolverines Threatened by Climate Change, Earlier Springs

New research finds that the aggressive wolverine may not be powerful enough to survive climate change

February 7, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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The aggressive wolverine may not be powerful enough to survive climate change in the contiguous United States, new research concludes.

Wolverine habitat in the northwestern United States is likely to warm dramatically if society continues to emit large amounts of greenhouse gases, according to new computer model simulations carried out at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo.

"The researchers have combined regional-scale climate projections with knowledge of a single species and its unique habitat to examine its vulnerability to a changing climate," says Sarah Ruth, program director in NSF's Directorate for Geosciences, which funds NCAR.

"This study is an example of how targeted climate predictions can produce new insights that could help us reduce the impact of future climate change on delicate ecosystems."

Climate change is likely to imperil the wolverine in two ways: reducing or eliminating the springtime snow cover that wolverines rely on for raising their young, and increasing August temperatures well beyond what the species may be able to tolerate.

"Species that depend on snow cover for their survival are likely to be very vulnerable to climate change," says NCAR scientist Synte Peacock, the lead author of a paper reporting the study's results.

"It's highly uncertain whether wolverines will continue to survive in the lower 48, given the changes that are likely to take place there."

Peacock's research focused on mountainous regions of the Northwest, the primary habitat of the wolverine population in the contiguous United States.

Results of the study were published last week in Environmental Research Letters. The work was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), NCAR's sponsor.

Wolverines make their home mainly in the boreal forests and tundra regions of North America, Europe and Asia.

Their thick oily fur insulates wolverines from frost, and large padded paws help them run through deep snow.

While some 15,000 or more wolverines may roam Canada, only a few dozen to a few hundred are believed to live in the contiguous United States, almost entirely in mountainous areas in Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and Washington.

Wolverines inhabit regions that have late-season snow cover and relatively cool summer temperatures, with daily highs averaging 72 degrees Fahrenheit or less.

Female wolverines make their springtime dens in the snow, which provides warmth to the newborn kits, the proper name for wolverine young, and protects them from predators.

Biologists are doubtful that the species could survive in regions with little spring snow or significantly higher summertime temperatures.

To project the future climate in regions of the contiguous United States where wolverines live, Peacock analyzed results from new simulations carried out by a team of researchers at NCAR.

They used the newest version of the Community Climate System Model, developed by scientists at the Department of Energy and NCAR with colleagues at other organizations.

Peacock analyzed three scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions: low (carbon dioxide emissions stay at present-day levels until 2020, then decline to zero by the early 2080s); medium-low (emissions rise slightly until 2040, then decline sharply toward the end of the century); and high (emissions continue to increase unabated).

In the high emissions scenario, the computer simulations showed spring snow cover nearly or completely vanishing during the second half of this century in present-day wolverine habitat.

Similarly, spring snow cover in the medium-low scenario became greatly diminished, with many years experiencing zero snow cover.

Under the low emissions scenario, springtime snow cover conditions remained similar to those of the present day.

The computer projections also showed that August temperatures may increase dramatically.

August temperatures currently top off at about 90 degrees Fahrenheit in areas where wolverines live. But maximum daily temperatures by the end of the century were projected to exceed 90 degrees under the two higher-emission scenarios.

Unless the wolverine is able to very rapidly adapt to summertime temperatures far above anything it currently experiences, and to a spring with little or no snow cover, it is unlikely that it will continue to survive in the contiguous U.S. under a high or medium-low emissions scenario.

Tags:
endangered species,
greenhouse gases,
global warming,
environment,
animals

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Business and industry is enmeshed in a Lilliputian tangle of government regulation at federal, state and local levels. California is a perfect example of the anti-business climate that is entrenched in government. There seems to be a Green Barny Fife in charge of every government department, agency and commission.

This madness raises the costs of every phase of business development, and results in higher prices for consumers or jobs outsourced overseas.

As just one of a thousand examples - here in California, the government is tearing down hydroelectric dams at a cost of billions of dollars, is then going to spend more billions restoring "scenic rivers" and salmon habitat. The government plans to replaces this loss of 6% of our power with windmills and solar panels covering thousands of acres of foothills and desert. This building is already well underway and the destruction of the habitat is beyond description. But I suppose killing rabbits, squirrels, coyotes, reptiles and birds is more palatable to the Greens than forcing the salmon to use fish ladders. Nothing lives under solar panels or under giant, nightmarish, whirling scarecrows - nothing.

The insanity continues when one considers that a wind-turbine never even produces the amount of energy it takes to: mine and transport the raw materials to the factory to build it, transport it again across the ocean from China or Italy, then move it, and the giant steel towers across the country, build the roads to each of thousands of wind-towers, dig the hundreds of miles of trenching for the underground cables, erect the transmission towers, build transformer stations and support facilities, strings thousands of miles of cables, transport and pour the 50+tons of concrete for each windmill foundation and the transmission towers, and then move the the 2 hundred foot high cranes for installation and maintenance. Add to that the energy expended by the hundreds of workers traveling to and from the job site. Having men build pyramids would expend less energy, create less carbon, do less damage to the environment, and would probably have the same net energy gain.

Even Governor Moonbeam admits that the wind and solar plants currently being built on these thousands of acres won't even replace the power lost from the planned destruction of the hydroelectric dams and reservoirs. Duh....what a great plan.

Meanwhile, our President and his Green acolytes, Ken Salazar and Lisa Jackson are closing down oil drilling, blocking nuclear power, natural gas and clean coal - and creating more onerous regulations to further strangle jobs and industry. All of which results in higher costs for energy, food production and everything else. Expensive energy is not a job creator - at least not in the "real sense".

Obama said, under his plan, "energy costs will necessarily skyrocket."

Well, this is one time I can certainly agree with the president.

"Going Green Has Gone Too Far".

R.L. Schaefer of CA 8:58PM February 07, 2011

As worrying as this this, I fear it is small-peanuts compared to what we'll see elsewhere in regions of the world more at risk from >2.degrees warming.

Tom of DC 1:22PM February 07, 2011

Now Leftist Democrat Scientists (in need of another funding source I'm sure) adds Wolverine survival to "climate change".......

......you just can't make this stuff up! ......Hilarious rationalization of a position in search of a cause.....

......if you just keep repeating it, over and over again, maybe, just maybe, "they" will believe it.....

Patrick of FL 1:10PM February 07, 2011

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