Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 53775
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2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

2010/4/7-15 [Recreation/Pets] UID:53775 Activity:nil
4/7     Climate change kills arctic birds -- but not just in the ways you
        think:
        http://www.csua.org/u/qhh
2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

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2008/1/31-2/2 [Recreation/Pets] UID:49042 Activity:low
1/31    This should never happen, to anyone
        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BzjLlqIuVhI
        [Title: Bird Poops in Mouth]
        \_ Make bird poop illegal!
        \_ totally 100% fake
           \_ Oh, you were there?
	...
2007/12/31-2008/1/7 [Recreation/Pets] UID:48870 Activity:moderate
12/31   "Wind turbines offer cheap energy"
        http://www.csua.org/u/kck
        This is not the big and costly turbines that you see in Livermore.
        \_ Wind power kills birds.  Can't use that.
           \_ I say we throw wind-farm NIMBY-ists into the blades!
              \_ Saving birds from a horrible death is not NIMBY-ism.  Birds
	...
2007/9/4-5 [Recreation/Dating] UID:47883 Activity:very high
9/4     An acquaintance of mine said: "My wife is a sex camel." I'm sure
        this is anomalous, because the MOTD told me women love to have
        sex all the time.
        \_ you're an idiot.
        \_ Are camels known for having a lot of sex?  I'm confused.
        \_ Does your wife have camel toe?
	...
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www.csua.org/u/qhh -> news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100407/sc_livescience/strangebirddeathscreatearctictragicomedy
com - Wed Apr 7, 9:25 am ET Like scenes out of Gary Larson's "Far Side" comic strip, scientists have discovered a tragicomedy playing out in deaths of Arctic seabirds. Still others simply bleed to death after being attacked by mosquito swarms. "We saw birds dying of what at best could be called Gary Larson events," said Mark Mallory of the Canadian Wildlife Service in Iqaluit. "You see a bird for apparently no good reason fly into the cliff and die. Mallory and two other Canadian scientists reviewed 33 years and 7,000 days of fieldwork that had observed six bird species in 11 different colonies in the eastern Arctic ranging from northern Hudson Bay to Devon Island. The findings were published recently in the journal Arctic. Northern fulmars were caught in an avalanche slide and died hitting the sea ice. The fulmars, like other Arctic seabirds, tend to nest on cliffs made of sedimentary rock, which erodes more easily than other rock types. Early in the summer season, as the weather is just warming up and the ice and snow start to melt, there are small avalanches. In another slapstick, albeit sad, event, a thick-billed murre was found dead after getting its foot stuck in a crack in the cliff face on Coats Island. black-legged kittiwakes died where they were nesting: "An entire cliff face fell away, and we estimate 800 birds were killed in this one event," Mallory told LiveScience, adding that his colleague said it looked as if the rock had liquefied and the birds were just caught in the rubble. The researchers suspect as the ice goes through freezing and melting, and the consequential expanding and contracting, it puts pressure on the rocks and causes these rock falls. "I was working at a fulmar colony and after a couple of days of fog we'd see fulmars on the sea ice, alive but with their wings broken," Mallory said. "These birds are phenomenal flyers, but you take away their visibility to a meter or two and maybe that causes problems. In talking to my Inuit guides, they told me that they had seen this a lot, and thought that the birds flew into each other in low visibility." Birds were also found dead after being slammed into the ocean from so-called Katabatic winds. "They flow down off of the glacier with the temperature differential and shoot across the land," Mallory explained. Since the winds are intermittent and the birds, when on land, stay close to cliffs, they go about their usual leap into the ocean to snag food. No matter how much flapping the birds did, Mallory said, they just get driven into the water. Possibly the most grizzly deaths occurred when mosquitoes, which increase in numbers when temperatures warm, attacked the birds' feet. "It honestly looks like the murre has fur on its feet or is wearing fur slippers," Mallory said. The researchers note that despite the strange endings, the percentage of dead birds was relatively low - just a few thousands out of millions of birds in the area. temperate and tropical birds, which tend to die of more "normal" causes, from parasites to oil spills to lack of fish for food. Mallory's team didn't go into new the study looking for climate-change-related deaths, but that's what they found. to factors related to climate and weather," Mallory said. Some birds were killed by erosion of their cliff nests, crushed by melting ice, crushed by avalanches, or slammed into the ocean by really strong winds. If temperatures warm and intense storms in the Arctic increase, along with other climate factors, "we might see mortality in these birds from these things increase from what they are now." But Mallory adds that he and his team are not sounding an alarm bell that climate change is going to kill off all of the seabirds. Anthony Gaston and H Grant Gilchrist of the National Wildlife Research Center in Canada contributed to the research. com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Report Abuse I find this article appalling, and the author very crass and immature. Please find someone to write that isn't making fun of something tragic like this. True it's just birds, but they are still creatures that are suffering and dying due to climate change that humans have caused, and it is not something to be joked about.