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Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'

Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'

Yahoo6 days ago
Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'
Dedicated conservationists around the world know the importance of preserving our delicate ecosystems. Ensuring healthy biodiversity not only protects plant and animal life but also helps keep our food chains healthy and thriving.
This is why it's so exciting when animals that have disappeared from their natural habitats reappear.
A family of four otters was recently reintroduced to the Iberá wetlands in Argentina. They now swim freely in a lake in Laguna Paraná, located in the province of Corrientes. Otters have been missing from the region for the past 40 years, and the hope is that this family will begin to repopulate the area.
The mission to reintroduce giant river otters to the wetlands is a joint project between Argentina's National Parks Administration and Rewilding Argentina, and the program was a long time coming. The administrators had to first find suitable river otters and then get international permission to move them.
The giant river otter is endangered around the world. Its numbers have declined because of a combination of habitat loss and illegal hunting. This is, unfortunately, not uncommon. Climate change has made it difficult for many species to survive as natural habitats have been destroyed by droughts and massive wildfires.
But encouragingly, this is only the latest great news on the conservation front. Last year, it was reported that California's gray wolf population doubled for the first time in 100 years. And beavers have been discovered in the wild in Britain, which could provide a natural defense against wildfires and flooding.
The leaders of the Argentine program were thrilled by the potential ramifications of repopulating the giant river otter in the area. The plan is to monitor them closely and release more as time goes on.
"The giant river otter is one of the largest aquatic predators in the wetlands of South America, and it's a particularly active and voracious species," said Sebastián Di Martino, conservation director of Rewilding Argentina.
This is important because the reintroduction of a species will hopefully have a positive impact and help restore massive ecosystems.
As Di Martino explained, "It's a dynamic we need to better understand because, more than recovering one species, we want to recover its ecological role in the ecosystem, so we're measuring the diversity and abundance of fish species in Iberá, via a procedure that assesses DNA in the water and tells us the species that are present and their numbers."
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Stunning images of life captured in dive to ocean floor off Argentina. See them
Stunning images of life captured in dive to ocean floor off Argentina. See them

Miami Herald

time3 days ago

  • Miami Herald

Stunning images of life captured in dive to ocean floor off Argentina. See them

A team of 30 Argentinian scientists aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute's state-of-the-art research vessel Falkor (too) has embarked on the first-ever journey to the underwater Mar Del Plata Canyon off the coast of Argentina. Mar del Plata sits more than 2 miles below the ocean surface, according to the Schmidt Ocean Institute. This mysterious part of the ocean is at the junction of two powerful currents, one of which is salty and warm, while the other is cold and rich in nutrients, creating a highly biodiverse environment, experts said. The 20-day Talud Continental IV expedition, which began July 22, makes use of the remotely operated vehicle 'SuBastian' to visit the seafloor and record the marine life without disturbing the environment, according to a July 30 news release from Argentina's National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET). It is the first time SuBastian, capable of capturing ultra-high-definition images and collecting samples, has been used in Argentine waters, according to the release. Expedition leader Dr. Daniel Lauretta said exploring the underwater region is like exploring another planet, adding that with every dive, there is something new to discover, according to the release. The team will collect many samples including environmental DNA, such as shed skin, which will allow them to identify animals that live in that habitat but may not have been directly observed, researchers said. SuBastian will allow researchers to gather 'evidence of coral gardens and animal communities they know exist but have never seen in their natural setting,' and likely aid in the discovery of many new species, according to experts. SuBastian's dives to the ocean floor are being live-streamed on the Schmidt Ocean Institute 's YouTube channel. Recordings of previous dives from this expedition, labeled Mar Del Plata Canyon, can be found under past live streams section. The expedition will conclude Aug. 10. Google Translate was used to translate the news release from the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research.

Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'
Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species'

Experts thrilled after reintroducing rare creatures into wild after 40-year absence: 'It's a particularly active and voracious species' Dedicated conservationists around the world know the importance of preserving our delicate ecosystems. Ensuring healthy biodiversity not only protects plant and animal life but also helps keep our food chains healthy and thriving. This is why it's so exciting when animals that have disappeared from their natural habitats reappear. A family of four otters was recently reintroduced to the Iberá wetlands in Argentina. They now swim freely in a lake in Laguna Paraná, located in the province of Corrientes. Otters have been missing from the region for the past 40 years, and the hope is that this family will begin to repopulate the area. The mission to reintroduce giant river otters to the wetlands is a joint project between Argentina's National Parks Administration and Rewilding Argentina, and the program was a long time coming. The administrators had to first find suitable river otters and then get international permission to move them. The giant river otter is endangered around the world. Its numbers have declined because of a combination of habitat loss and illegal hunting. This is, unfortunately, not uncommon. Climate change has made it difficult for many species to survive as natural habitats have been destroyed by droughts and massive wildfires. But encouragingly, this is only the latest great news on the conservation front. Last year, it was reported that California's gray wolf population doubled for the first time in 100 years. And beavers have been discovered in the wild in Britain, which could provide a natural defense against wildfires and flooding. The leaders of the Argentine program were thrilled by the potential ramifications of repopulating the giant river otter in the area. The plan is to monitor them closely and release more as time goes on. "The giant river otter is one of the largest aquatic predators in the wetlands of South America, and it's a particularly active and voracious species," said Sebastián Di Martino, conservation director of Rewilding Argentina. This is important because the reintroduction of a species will hopefully have a positive impact and help restore massive ecosystems. As Di Martino explained, "It's a dynamic we need to better understand because, more than recovering one species, we want to recover its ecological role in the ecosystem, so we're measuring the diversity and abundance of fish species in Iberá, via a procedure that assesses DNA in the water and tells us the species that are present and their numbers." Do you think America does a good job of protecting its natural beauty? Definitely Only in some areas No way I'm not sure Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet. Solve the daily Crossword

The weird way that penguin poop might be cooling Antarctica
The weird way that penguin poop might be cooling Antarctica

Miami Herald

time18-07-2025

  • Miami Herald

The weird way that penguin poop might be cooling Antarctica

In December 2022, Matthew Boyer hopped on an Argentine military plane to one of the more remote habitations on Earth: Marambio Station at the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, where the icy continent stretches toward South America. Months before that, Boyer had to ship expensive, delicate instruments that might get busted by the time he landed. "When you arrive, you have boxes that have been sometimes sitting outside in Antarctica for a month or two in a cold warehouse," said Boyer, a doctoral student in atmospheric science at the University of Helsinki. "And we're talking about sensitive instrumentation." But the effort paid off, because Boyer and his colleagues found something peculiar about penguin guano, Grist reports. In a paper published on May 22 in the journal Communications Earth and Environment, they describe how ammonia wafting off the droppings of 60,000 birds contributed to the formation of clouds that might be insulating Antarctica, helping cool down an otherwise rapidly warming continent. Some penguin populations, however, are under serious threat because of climate change. Losing them and their guano could mean fewer clouds and more heating in an already fragile ecosystem, one so full of ice that it will significantly raise sea levels worldwide as it melts. A better understanding of this dynamic could help scientists hone their models of how Antarctica will transform as the world warms. They can now investigate, for instance, if some penguin species produce more ammonia and, therefore, more of a cooling effect. "That's the impact of this paper," said Tamara Russell, a marine ornithologist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, who studies penguins but wasn't involved in the research. "That will inform the models better, because we know that some species are decreasing, some are increasing, and that's going to change a lot down there in many different ways." With their expensive instruments, Boyer and his research team measured atmospheric ammonia between January and March 2023, summertime in the southern hemisphere. They found that when the wind was blowing from an Adelie penguin colony 5 miles away from the detectors, concentrations of the gas shot up to 1,000 times higher than the baseline. Even when the penguins had moved out of the colony after breeding, ammonia concentrations remained elevated for at least a month, as the guano continued emitting the gas. That atmospheric ammonia could have been helping cool the area. The researchers further demonstrated that the ammonia kicks off an atmospheric chain reaction. Out at sea, tiny plantlike organisms known as phytoplankton release the gas dimethyl sulfide, which transforms into sulphuric acid in the atmosphere. Because ammonia is a base, it reacts readily with this acid. This coupling results in the rapid formation of aerosol particles. Clouds form when water vapor gloms onto any number of different aerosols, like soot and pollen, floating around in the atmosphere. In populated places, these particles are more abundant, because industries and vehicles emit so many of them as pollutants. Trees and other vegetation spew aerosols, too. But because Antarctica lacks trees and doesn't have much vegetation at all, the aerosols from penguin guano and phytoplankton can make quite an impact. In February 2023, Boyer and the other researchers measured a particularly strong burst of particles associated with guano, sampled a resulting fog a few hours later, and found particles created by the interaction of ammonia from the guano and sulphuric acid from the plankton. "There is a deep connection between these ecosystem processes, between penguins and phytoplankton at the ocean surface," Boyer said. "Their gas is all interacting to form these particles and clouds." But here's where the climate impacts get a bit trickier. Scientists know that in general, clouds cool Earth's climate by reflecting some of the sun's energy back into space. Although Boyer and his team hypothesize that clouds enhanced with penguin ammonia are probably helping cool this part of Antarctica, they note that they didn't quantify that climate effect, which would require further research. That's a critical bit of information because of the potential for the warming climate to create a feedback loop. As oceans heat up, penguins are losing access to some of their prey, and colonies are shrinking or disappearing as a result. Fewer penguins producing guano means less ammonia and fewer clouds, which means more warming and more disruptions to the animals, and on and on in a self-reinforcing cycle. "If this paper is correct-and it really seems to be a nice piece of work to me-[there's going to be] a feedback effect, where it's going to accelerate the changes that are already pushing change in the penguins," said Peter Roopnarine, curator of geology at the California Academy of Sciences. Scientists might now look elsewhere, Roopnarine adds, to find other bird colonies that could also be providing cloud cover. Protecting those species from pollution and hunting would be a natural way to engineer Earth systems to offset some planetary warming. "We think it's for the sake of the birds," Roopnarine said. "Well, obviously it goes well beyond that." This story was produced by Grist and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. © Stacker Media, LLC.

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