Best of our wild blogs: 10 Aug 09


Fireworks and balloons: harmless?
from wild shores of singapore

Long-tailed macaque @ Bishan Park feeding on myna
from Nature Spies

St. John's Island - "This type of seaweed sometimes can find slug" from Singapore Nature and Half a Bunny and the Salmon of Doubt by kungfubunny and colourful clouds

The Other Side of St. John's Island
from wild shores of singapore and secret mangroves of St. John's

Sinking mud at Pasir Ris Part I
from God's wonderful creation and Half a Bunny and the Salmon of Doubt

No Uncle, I Am Not Waiting For...
from colourful clouds

Sunbird and spittlebug
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Monday Morgue: 10th August 2009
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Sprawl! Is Earth Becoming a Planet of SuperCities?
from The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond


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Ensuring Singapore stays green

Acting as an unofficial watchdog, the Nature Society keeps a close eye on Singapore's environment
Ong Dai Lin, The New Paper 10 Aug 09;

WHEN a group of bird lovers came across a mangrove area rich in migratory birds in 1986 and found out that the land was scheduled for development, they launched a campaign to save it.

After three years, the environmentalists from the Malayan Nature Society succeeded in getting the bird sanctuary preserved. The place is known today as Sungei Buloh Nature Park.

That success fuelled the passion of some members to do more for the environment; they broke away and formed the Nature Society (Singapore) in 1991.

"The society's main focus is on the natural environment and the wildlife that is still extant in Singapore, and in nature conservation," Dr Ho Hua Chew, a former chairman of its Conservation Committee told Today. "We see our role in terms of advocacy and also as watchdog."

The 1,500-member society not only submit proposals for the conservation of green areas in Singapore, it also monitors and gives feedback on major developments like the building of Resorts World at Sentosa.

In 1992, it successfully lobbied against the building of a golf course at the Lower Pierce Forest. The society also played a large role in the conservation of areas like Pulau Ubin and Chek Jawa (picture).

Going forward, there are three main areas that Singapore can do more for the environment, said Dr Ho.

First, in its plans to achieve a sustainable Singapore, the Government can pay more attention to green issues like habitat and biodiversity conservation, the fragmentation of the island's reserves, and survival programmes for endangered species. Singapore should also preserve what is left of its coral and inter-tidal eco systems.

Dr Ho, a freelance lecturer, estimated that 60 per cent of Singapore's coral have already been destroyed.

Another area: The promotion of nature appreciation and studies in schools in a systematic and significant way to inculcate in the young a love for nature. This should be an integral and regular part of the school curriculum, said Dr Ho.

How do you see the Nature Society's role in meeting these future environmental goals in Singapore?

We will provide the necessary feedback and information as to the remaining wildlife and habitat areas that need to be conserved such as Sungei Mandai and Bukit Brown. We can play a co-ordinating role in pushing these goals in conjunction with other green groups and non-government organisations. The society can promote public awareness and appreciation of these nature areas by expanding our outreach programmes.

Why is the environmental cause important to Singapore?

As a global city, our ecological footprint is huge. We have used up a lot of our territorial space for housing and industries. We also depend on other countries for our food, water, timber and other needs. So, we are far from being sustainable in our development. We need to face these facts and do more for the environment by cutting down drastically our unsustainability, a paying back of what we took for us to become a global city that we are now.

What is the difference between Nature Society when it first started and what it is today? How has it evolved?

In the early years, we tended to be regarded by many people, even by our own members, as a hobby group. Today, our membership has increased a great deal and membership interest has widened.

There is also a great increase in members of the public coming to us to deal with all kinds of plants and wildlife issues or happenings they encounter - such as a new development project in their neighbourhood, trees being cut, a wild animal being injured ... This reflects the sort of standing we have in the eyes of the public.


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Malaysian Seeks Help Of Its Oil Palm Planters In Riau To Prevent Haze

Bernama 9 Aug 09;

PEKAN BARU (RIAU), Aug 9 (Bernama) -- Malaysia has requested the assistance of its three major investors in Riau to enhance their role and cooperation with local authorities in efforts to prevent peat and forest fires to reduce haze.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Douglas Uggah Embas said the three investors, which operate a 180,000 hectare oil palm plantation here, could play an important role by ensuring their plantations were free of any bush or peat fire, and to render immediate assistance if it occurred.

He said they should also continue with the practice of zero burning in their plantations.

"This is a social responsibility which is very much appreciated by the Malaysian government and also the Indonesian government," he said at a dinner with Malaysian oil palm planters here Saturday night.

Unggah Embas is leading a delegation from his ministry for a two-day working visit here, during which he also handed over to the Indonesian government two projects, the air quality monitoring station and canal blocking, meant to prevent fire on peat soil.

Meanwhile, Malaysian Consul in Riau, Zamani Ismail, said the district governor welcomed the assistance provided by the Malaysian government in efforts to extinguish the forest firers in Riau.

"They see the assistance provided by Malaysia as an act which signifies a good friendship and neighhbourliness," he told Bernama.

Last night, Unggah Embas, who was accompanied by Indonesian Minister of Environment, Rahmat Witoelar, visited a Malaysian-aided project in Bagan Siati Api.

Unggah Embas returned to Kuala Lumpur on Sunday morning.

-- BERNAMA

Plantation firms behind forest fires in Riau: Minister
Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 9 Aug 09;

State Minister for Environment claimed that several plantation firms operating in Riau were behind the massive forest fires that caused dangerous levels of air pollution across the province last week.

He said that his office would submit its findings on forest fires cases to national police to take legal action.

“We will file lawsuit against the plantation firms this week,” he told The Jakarta Post on Sunday.

Minister Rachmat and his Malaysian counterpart Douglas Unggah Embas flew over forest in Riau to watch the fires.

“The forest fires remain in place and uncontrollable. I see some forest fires are in the plantation firms.”

The 1999 environmental law authorizes civilian officials to investigate environmental-related violations.

Article 40 of the law says civil investigation officials may examine people accused of crimes in relation to violations.

The civilian investigators are also allowed to seek explanation and evidence from individuals or legal bodies in connection with criminal violations of the environmental laws.

The results of investigations can then be submitted to the police, who can then choose to arrest suspects based on the investigations.

Violators can face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a Rp 500 million fine.

Govt to report firms burning forests to police
Adianto P. Simamora and Rizal Harahap, The Jakarta Post 10 Aug 09;

State Minister for the Environment Rachmat Witoelar has pledged to submit findings on massive forest fires in Riau to help the police take legal action against plantation companies that have showed disdain for environmental law.

Rachmat confirmed that several plantation firms operating in Riau were behind the forest fires that have disrupted flights and forced dozens of schools to close due to the thick haze from fires last week.

"We will file lawsuits against firms involved in forest fires in Riau this week," he told The Jakarta Post on Sunday.

Rachmat made the statement after his visit to Riau on Saturday when he and his Malaysian counterpart Douglas Unggah Embas flew over the forest areas to survey the impact of the fires.

"The forest fires in Riau were still at uncontrollable levels during my visit. I also saw forest fires in the plantation company areas," he said.

Environmental law allows civil investigators (PPNS) to investigate environment-related violations.

The results of these investigations are then submitted to police, who choose whether to investigate the matter further.

Violators can face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a Rp 500 million (US$50, 505) fine.

A team from Rachmat's office has been in Riau investigating the case for the past week.

In February, the ministry also carried out similar investigations of forest fires in Pelalawan, Riau, but no companies or local farmers have been taken to court.

WWF Indonesia said fire hot spots in Riau reached 2,395 in July, the highest ever across the country. A hot spot is defined as a fire covering at least a 1-hectare area.

The latest forest fires have caused the repeated closure of airports in Riau due to low visibility. The air quality also reached "dangerous" levels due to thick haze and has forced schools in the area to close. The haze reportedly reached Malaysia last week.

During a meeting with Rachmat, Douglas said that his country would not complain about the "export" of haze from Indonesia.

"We understand how difficult it is to stop the fires. I myself have seen the forest fires in Riau from a helicopter. It is difficult to control the fires as they have hit huge areas," he told reporters in Riau on Saturday.

"We also have the same problem in Sarawak."

The Associated Press reported Sunday that pollution caused air quality to plunge to its worst level this year in the eastern parts of Kalimantan, where more than 1,000 hectares of wildfires - roughly the size of 1,500 soccer fields - are raging in several forests, especially near Sarawak's border with the neighboring sultanate of Brunei.


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$38bn warning on Great Barrier Reef bleaching

Adam Morton, The Age 10 Aug 09;

BLEACHING of the Great Barrier Reef will cost Australia almost $38 billion if climate change due to greenhouse gas emissions continues unchecked, an analysis has found.

A report commissioned by the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, a business-backed body investing in science, estimates half the tourists drawn to see reef coral will stay away if projections of permanent bleaching prove correct.

Foundation chairman John Schubert, the outgoing chairman of the Commonwealth Bank, said the report was a wake-up call about the economic damage that would be triggered by the loss of one of Australia's great natural assets.

The analysis by Oxford Economics assessed not only the value of the reef in tourism and fishing, but the indirect value of having a natural barrier protecting the coastline. A measure of the value people place on the reef's survival was also included.

It found coral bleaching would result in the value of the reef tumbling by 73 per cent, from $51.4 billion to $13.7 billion. The loss in the Cairns region would be more acute: 90 per cent of an estimated value of $17.9 billion.

"We are at a crossroads," Dr Schubert said. "We owe it to the communities … to all Australians and the global community to do all we can to secure the reef's future."

Life's a bleach for Barrier Reef as climate changes
Jamie Walker, The Australian 10 Aug 09;

THE Great Barrier Reef's gilt-edged importance to the Australian economy has been highlighted by new research into the potential financial cost of climate change to the world heritage-listed wonder.

British consultant Oxford Economics puts the present value of the reef at $51.4 billion - approaching $2500 for every Australian alive today - but warns that nearly four-fifths of its worth would be destroyed if the coral was totally and permanently bleached.

The study goes beyond placing a dollar figure on tourism, fishing and other commercial activities involving the reef, valuing "indirect" benefits such as its role in protecting coastal communities from storms and cyclones.

The research was commissioned by the not-for-profit Great Barrier Reef Foundation. Its chairman, John Schubert, warned yesterday that the reef was at a "crossroads" because of climate change.

"We are basically at a point where we need to take action to ensure that as much of the reef as possible can be preserved," Dr Schubert said in releasing the Oxford Economics study.

The $51.4bn figure for the reef's net worth is calculated over a century, at a preferred discount rate of 2.65 per cent to price in the opportunity cost of tying up that capital.

Oxford Economics valued the net economic benefit and profit generated by tourism on the reef at $20.2bn, with recreational fishing worth $2.8bn. Profit from commercial fishing is $1.4bn, while the so-called indirect-use value of the reef as a coastal defence absorbing up to 90per cent of the destructive force of storm-driven waves was $10bn in present value terms.

Dr Schubert said the British firm's estimate of the reef's economic worth was broadly in line with that of Australian forecaster Access Economics, though each used a different form of economic modelling.

Oxford Economics also factored in a "non-use" worth of the reef of $15.2bn, representing the potential value to Australians of, say, a future visit to the reef or of its capacity to yield breakthroughs in biomedicine and other forms of research.

In costing these economic benefits, Oxford Economics said it had been able to value the potentially catastrophic effects of coral bleaching from higher ocean temperature and levels caused by climate change.

The report found that the reef had been affected by heat-related coral bleaching six times over the past 25 years, most severely in 2002, when 60per cent of reefs within the vast marine park were hit, destroying up to a tenth of the coral.

Total and permanent bleaching of the reef would cost $37.7bn, or 73 per cent of its assessed value to the economy, presently accounting for nearly 5 per cent of Australia's gross domestic product. Tourism would be devastated, with up to half of the million or so people who visit the reef annually likely to stay away.

The Cairns region would lose 90per cent of the $17.9bn reef-related activity boosting the local economy.

"This report provides a wake-up call about the threat to one of Australia's greatest natural assets and the potential cost to Australia," Dr Schubert said.

"It also establishes for the first time the extent to which the Cairns region would be affected by a major bleaching event."

Report reveals $37b reef bleaching cost
ABC 10 Aug 09;

An international study has found that the economic cost of coral bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef would be $37.7 billion.

The Oxford Economics report, which values the reef at $51.4 billion, also found up to 50 per cent of tourists who would normally visit the reef would stay away from Queensland if bleaching was permanent.

The study was commissioned by the Great Barrier Reef Foundation to set an economic benchmark for the natural asset.

The foundation's John Schubert says the figures paint a disturbing picture for tourism and local communities that directly benefit from their proximity to the reef.

Managing director Judy Stewart expects the economic study will set a new standard for valuing the environment.

"I expect that the methodology will be looked at in great detail by other economists looking at other environmental assets elsewhere, as well as how we value coral reefs elsewhere," she said.

Coral bleaching report 'no surprise'
Kristy Sexton-McGrath, ABC 10 Aug 09;

The Queensland Tourism Industry Council (QTIC) says it is not surprised by a report showing the economic cost of coral bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef would approach $40 billion.

The Oxford Economics report also found up to 50 per cent of tourists who would normally visit the reef would stay away from Queensland, if bleaching was permanent.

QTIC chief executive Daniel Gschwind says environmental agencies and reef operators have an important role to play in protecting the reef.

"The Barrier Reef is not only a great ecological asset, it is also a very, very important part of our economic base and we have every reason to keep continuing what we are doing and that is to look after the reef, manage it well, and make sure the reef stays one of the world's best - if not the best - managed reef," he said.

Mr Gschwind says the report's findings come as no surprise.

"This study confirms that the quality of the coral, quality of the dive, quality of the snorkelling attractions is a very, very important part of what brings people to Queensland, what brings people to Australia," he said.

"We have a very strong interest in the tourism industry to continue our efforts to make sure we operate efficiently."


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Spreading Lionfish Invasion Threatens Bahamas

Ann Dornfeld, NPR 9 Aug 09;

In 1992, Hurricane Andrew smashed an aquarium tank in Florida. About a half-dozen spiny, venomous lionfish washed into the Atlantic Ocean, spawning an invasion that could kill off local industry along with the native fish.

People come to the Exuma Islands in the Bahamas to kayak between tiny, uninhabited islands and dive in the shallow, turquoise water. Above the water, the landscape looks like a pristine tropical paradise. But the same isn't true beneath the waves.

"In 2005, the first lionfish showed up, and we didn't pay much attention to it," says Oregon State University zoology professor Mark Hixon, who has studied reef fish here for almost two decades. "The next year, we saw a few more. Then in 2007 there was a population explosion. There were so many lionfish around that they were eating the fish we were studying, and we had to start studying the lionfish. There was nothing else to do."

Lionfish are native to the Indian and Pacific oceans. But in the past few years, they've spread up the Eastern seaboard and throughout the Caribbean. The Bahamas have been hit the hardest.

They're hard to miss with their red and white stripes and a tall row of venomous spines down their backs. The fan-like fins look like a lion's mane. And like lions, they are ferocious predators. Last year, Hixon co-authored a study with Mark Albins that showed a lionfish can kill three-quarters of a reef's fish population in just five weeks.

"This year we're going to see if that's gotten worse — because the number of lionfish has definitely increased in the intervening year," Hixon says.

What Stops A Lionfish?

Diving around a coral reef, Hixon shines a light under every ledge, looking for lionfish and the fish they like to eat. After a few minutes, he waves his light frantically under an overhang. A lionfish the size of a football fans the water with its huge, quilled fins. These days, the only thing unusual about spotting a lionfish in the Bahamas is seeing just one of them.

Back on the boat, Hixon is upbeat. Last year his team pulled more than a dozen lionfish off this reef. "And this year, there's just one," he says. "What that tells us is that our removals took, and lasted a whole year."

But Hixon says divers can only catch so many. So he's also studying native lionfish in the Pacific Ocean to understand what keeps their populations in check.

Parasites could be one limiting factor. Zoologist Paul Sikkel peers through a microscope at the gills of one of the lionfish Hixon's team has just caught.

"Wow! Just so clean," Sikkel exclaims. "There's nothing in there. Have a look. A local fish, you'd see a bunch of really small worms on those red gill filaments. And they squirm, so it's easy to pick them out. But there's nothing on there."

The parasites that would be swarming over a local fish aren't going near the lionfish. Sikkel says that might be one secret to the invasion.

"If you consider parasites a sort of a tax that fish have to pay, a lot of their energy gets diverted into parasites, and so a fish that doesn't have those [parasites] can develop more of its energy into its own growth and reproduction," Sikkel says.

Tourism, Fishing Fall Prey

Until marine predators or parasites learn to feed on lionfish, the best hope for slowing the spread may be humans. The fish are a delicacy in Asia, but not in the Bahamas, given the painful sting their spines can inflict. A few restaurants serve lionfish now, and there's an effort to teach Bahamians how to catch and cook them.

Lakeshia Anderson with the Bahamas Department of Fisheries says the livelihoods of many islanders depend on slowing the invasion.

"With the quantities of lionfish that we've found in our waters and the amount of food they consume, it has the potential of really collapsing our commercially important species — our fishing industry in general," Anderson says.

But that's not all. Tourism is a $5 billion-a-year industry and accounts for half the employment in the Bahamas. Anderson worries that if the lionfish continue to devour colorful reef fish, divers will vacation elsewhere.

Hixon says in some places, the damage is already done.

"I was diving on a reef I've studied since 1991," he recounts. "It was so degraded, and there were so few fish in what used to be a teeming reef, that at one point I was overcome and went to tears."

He says in the best case scenario, some natural control will kick in and lionfish will become a minor part of the Caribbean and Atlantic reef community.


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Australian orchards threatened

University of Adelaide, ScienceAlert 10 Aug 09;

Climate change and urban expansion could threaten the sustainability of horticultural industries in the Adelaide Hills unless a long-term strategy is employed, according to a senior geographer at the University of Adelaide.

Geographical and Environmental Studies lecturer Dr Douglas Bardsley has spent the past four years working in partnership with the SA Government and the Adelaide Mt Lofty Ranges Natural Resources Management Board on long-term planning approaches to cope with climate change.

Together with the Department of Water, Land and Biodiversity Conservation, and Primary Industries and Resources SA, the group has developed geographical models with the Apple and Pear Growers Association to predict how warmer temperatures and urban expansion would affect their growing conditions.

"Projected warmer temperatures and rural residential development pose serious risks for industries such as the apple and pear industry, worth $25 million a year to South Australia," Dr Bardsley says. "The area available in the Hills to grow high-quality apples could shrink considerably."

The apple and pear industry is one of seven case studies undertaken since 2005 to assess the impact of global warming on South Australia's natural resources. "These projects, which consider impacts on agricultural industries, water, soil, biodiversity and coastal management in the Adelaide region, highlight the need for land use policies which respond directly to the risk of climate change."

Other key projects include looking at groundwater systems in the McLaren Vale area to ascertain how the Southern Vales would be affected long term by a drier climate and examining how changes in wind and rainfall patterns would alter soil management north of Adelaide.

Another study undertaken in conjunction with the CSIRO suggests that 14 plant species that are considered of high conservation value in SA would be particularly vulnerable to changes in temperature and rainfall.

"Years of drought in the Murray-Darling Basin have, in part, led to the collapse of important water management systems in South Australia. Projections suggest that these weather conditions are more like what we can expect in the future," Dr Bardsley says.

"The potential impacts of climate change for South Australia are likely to be negative for many stakeholders in the rural sector. It will be insufficient for us to simply try and manage environmental crises as they emerge.

"We need to integrate science into our future planning approaches and also work closely with key stakeholders to ensure the decisions we make incorporate the risks of future climate change," Dr Bardsley says.

He says as a result of his and his colleagues' research, the regional Board and local councils are investing significant amounts of time and money into climate change initiatives to make their regions less vulnerable.

"The challenge is to plan long term, beyond political cycles, to ensure we protect our natural resources."

Original news release.


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Future rainfall atlas created

ScienceAlert 10 Aug 09;
Australian National University

Researchers from The Australian National University have created the world’s first comprehensive visual atlas of global rainfall projections over the next 100 years based on all of the models used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its most recent report.

PhD researcher Wee Ho Lim and Dr Michael Roderick from ANU have created the Atlas of the Global Water Cycle, which contains some 300 pages of global maps and tables showing current and projected measures of rainfall, evaporation and runoff.

The atlas illustrate the projections of each of the 20 computer models used by different countries to forecast future water cycles – data drawn upon by the IPCC in its reporting on climate change, but not visualised in the same way and place until now.

“We know that as the world warms there is likely to be more rainfall on a global average basis,” Dr Roderick said. “But where is this increased rainfall going to occur, and which areas might get drier? These are simple questions to ask, but it is surprisingly hard for an individual to get an answer, whether they’re a farmer, civil engineer, teacher or interested citizen,” Dr Roderick said.

“As researchers active in the field we could not answer the question with certainty. In fact, until now we’ve never seen a compilation of the individual rainfall predictions made by all the different climate models.”

Dr Roderick said that the Atlas of the Global Water Cycle would make all the current best information on modelling for future rainfall more easily available so that individuals and communities could make more informed decisions about how to plan for the century to come. He said the climate models – such as the one used by the CSIRO in Australia – each take slightly different approaches to forecasting future rainfall patterns, and that there different findings tended to be averaged out for ease of communication.

“This averaging out of all these different findings is what we tend to see in reports from the IPCC and other international bodies. One problem with these kinds of visualisation for a place like Australia is that there is little consensus between the different models for what will happen to rainfall on our continent.

“The atlas means that you can now see all the different models’ predictions for Australia and the world in detail, and then come to a more informed understanding. All these models are like crystal balls for the global water cycle – but it’s a question of whose crystal ball is the best and how do we know that? I can’t answer that question, but at least by having all the information to compare people will be able to make more informed decisions.”

The Atlas of the Global Water Cycle is available for sale in hard copy or free download from ANU E press.

Original news release.


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Vast expanses of Arctic ice melt in summer heat

Charles J. Hanley, Associated Press Yahoo News 9 Aug 09;

TUKTOYAKTUK, Northwest Territories – The Arctic Ocean has given up tens of thousands more square miles (square kilometers) of ice on Sunday in a relentless summer of melt, with scientists watching through satellite eyes for a possible record low polar ice cap.

From the barren Arctic shore of this village in Canada's far northwest, 1,500 miles (2,414 kilometers) north of Seattle, veteran observer Eddie Gruben has seen the summer ice retreating more each decade as the world has warmed. By this weekend the ice edge lay some 80 miles (128 kilometers) at sea.

"Forty years ago, it was 40 miles (64 kilometers) out," said Gruben, 89, patriarch of a local contracting business.

Global average temperatures rose 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.6 degree Celsius) in the past century, but Arctic temperatures rose twice as much or even faster, almost certainly in good part because of manmade greenhouse gases, researchers say.

In late July the mercury soared to almost 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 degrees Celsius) in this settlement of 900 Inuvialuit, the name for western Arctic Eskimos.

"The water was really warm," Gruben said. "The kids were swimming in the ocean."

As of Thursday, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center reported, the polar ice cap extended over 2.61 million square miles (6.75 million square kilometers) after having shrunk an average 41,000 square miles (106,000 square kilometers) a day in July -- equivalent to one Indiana or three Belgiums daily.

The rate of melt was similar to that of July 2007, the year when the ice cap dwindled to a record low minimum extent of 1.7 million square miles (4.3 million square kilometers) in September.

In its latest analysis, the Colorado-based NSIDC said Arctic atmospheric conditions this summer have been similar to those of the summer of 2007, including a high-pressure ridge that produced clear skies and strong melt in the Beaufort Sea, the arm of the Arctic Ocean off northern Alaska and northwestern Canada.

In July, "we saw acceleration in loss of ice," the U.S. center's Walt Meier told The Associated Press. In recent days the pace has slowed, making a record-breaking final minimum "less likely but still possible," he said.

Scientists say the makeup of the frozen polar sea has shifted significantly the past few years, as thick multiyear ice has given way as the Arctic's dominant form to thin ice that comes and goes with each winter and summer.

The past few years have "signaled a fundamental change in the character of the ice and the Arctic climate," Meier said.

Ironically, the summer melts since 2007 appear to have allowed disintegrating but still thick multiyear ice to drift this year into the relatively narrow channels of the Northwest Passage, the east-west water route through Canada's Arctic islands. Usually impassable channels had been relatively ice-free the past two summers.

"We need some warm temperatures with easterly or southeasterly winds to break up and move this ice to the north," Mark Schrader, skipper of the sailboat "Ocean Watch," e-mailed The Associated Press from the west entrance to the passage.

The steel-hulled sailboat, with scientists joining it at stops along the way, is on a 25,000-mile (40,232-kilometer), foundation-financed circumnavigation of the Americas, to view and demonstrate the impact of climate change on the continents' environments.

Environmentalists worry, for example, that the ice-dependent polar bear will struggle to survive as the Arctic cap melts. Schrader reported seeing only one bear, an animal chased from the Arctic shore of Barrow, Alaska, that "swam close to Ocean Watch on its way out to sea."

Observation satellites' remote sensors will tell researchers in September whether the polar cap diminished this summer to its smallest size on record. Then the sun will begin to slip below the horizon for several months, and temperatures plunging in the polar darkness will freeze the surface of the sea again, leaving this and other Arctic coastlines in the grip of ice. Most of the sea ice will be new, thinner and weaker annual formations, however.

At a global conference last March in Copenhagen, scientists declared that climate change is occurring faster than had been anticipated, citing the fast-dying Arctic cap as one example. A month later, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted Arctic summers could be almost ice-free within 30 years, not at the century's end as earlier predicted.


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