Thousands of seabirds died from the tsunami in the United States
Thousands of seabirds were killed when the tsunami was caused by an earthquake off Japan last week flooding Midway, a remote atoll in the northwest of the Hawaiian Islands, USA.
Thousands of seabirds were killed when the tsunami was caused by an earthquake off Japan last week flooding Midway, a remote atoll in the northwest of the Hawaiian Islands, USA.
A Laysan albatross was washed up on the shore by Midway on the island.
At least 1,000 near-mature and mature Laysan seagulls have died, and thousands of other small birds, Barry W. Stieglitz, project leader for the Pacific Islands and Hawaii Islands Wildlife Conservation , said.
Many have drowned or buried under rubbish piles when waves of up to 1.5 m hit low-lying atolls about four hours after the 9.0-magnitude earthquake last Friday.
Non-species white albatross Laysan is at risk of extinction. About 1 million Laysan albatross live at Midway Atoll Wildlife Center, about 2,000km northwest of Honolulu, the capital of Hawaii, making the island the home of many Laysan albatrosses. most in the world.
But Mr. Stieglitz said, the number of dead birds may account for a significant portion of the total number of Laysan seabirds hatching this season.
The birds were rescued after the tsunami struck.
The tsunami struck three islands inside Midway atoll.
The 0.6-hectare Spit Island was completely submerged. Tsunamis have infested more than 60% of Eastern Island, 150 hectares wide. Big waves also hit 20% of Sand Island, the largest of the three islands, 486 hectares wide.
In addition, biologists are not sure how many pelicans may have died, because these birds live in underground caves and may be buried in tsunami-affected areas. Mr. Stieglitz estimates the number of dead seagulls could reach thousands.
Midway Atoll is in the North Pacific.
Since the seagulls eat at night, Stieglitz hopes many of them will fly away to feed on when the tsunami attacks before dawn.
Mr. Stieglitz said that many wildlife species have increased in numbers after such natural disasters. But tsunamis do not help species that face risks such as climate change and habitat loss.
Birds are trapped in rubbish piles.
The tsunami struck Midway Atoll after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Japan.
- Japanese tsunami garbage to Hawaii
- What will happen if tsunami?
- Count seabirds by recording sounds
- 'Population' seabirds reduced the alarm
- Japanese radiation detection off the west coast of the United States
- The first person infected with Ebola in the United States died
- Millions of tons of garbage drifted from Japan to the United States
- Terrible earthquake in America, thousands of bees died massively
- 'Tsunami' the sun hit the earth
- More than 8,000 unusually dead seabirds along Alaska's beaches
The viper in Vietnam has a unique and scary appearance. The secret of the dog barking on top of the pyramid in Egypt The bird species that was once 'offered to the king' has now become a rare, nutritious and expensive dish. First record of large centipede species in Vietnam Rare breed of flying chicken, only found in China A species of fish in Asia that has been frozen for 2 years is still alive and walking on land, causing the US to 'turn on' the alarm Strange wild dog can kill tigers Scimitar-horned oryx revived after being declared extinct