
Arctic birders combat impact of climate change and avian flu on delicate ecosystem
The population of kittiwakes has decreased by 80% since the 1990s along the Scandinavian country's coast. The small seagull species, among others, is under siege from climate change, predation, local fisheries and the bird flu.
So the town of Vardø, on the remote Vardøya Island in the Barents Sea, has stepped up to help the migrating visitors.
Three years ago, local fisherman Jan Vidar Hansen built a 'seagull hotel' out of crates for kittiwakes and other seabirds to nest in safely. The hotel has the added bonus of limiting the spread of unwelcome smells, dirty nests and droppings that have become a nuisance for the island's human population.
'The first year there was 55 nests. Last year it was 74, and this year we have 76,' Vidar Hansen said. He hopes the local council will agree to build a bigger seagull hotel in the future.
Seabirds have long been an important part of the identity of Vardø — so much so that the local museum has an exhibition dedicated to them. The town is known for its birding tourism as much as its radar station, which provides critical data to the U.S. Strategic Command thanks to its location nearly 60 kilometers (37 miles) from Russia's military hub on the Kola Peninsula.
The Gulf Stream
Norway's northern coast is an ecologically diverse area due to its topography as well as the Gulf Stream, which brings warmer water up from the Gulf of Mexico and then mixes with the cold Arctic air and water. This warmer water keeps the Barents Sea free from ice even though it's north of the Arctic Circle, and brings tons of fish larvae and other biomass up the Norwegian coast.
But the Gulf Stream is affected by climate change and is now bringing water that is too warm into the Barents Sea, changing the rich composition of the species there. It affects congregations of seabirds, marine mammals and, of course, many fish species.
Fish that need colder water are being pushed further north, while others that require the mix of warmer and Arctic water — like the small schooling fish called capelin — are seeing their migration patterns disturbed.
Capelin, for instance, are a major part of the diet for surface-feeding seabirds like kittiwakes, according to Tone Kristin Reiertsen, a researcher with the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research.
When capelin either swim deeper into the sea to get to colder water, or migrate further north, seabirds cannot get to them, she said. That in turn impacts the success of seabirds' breeding because they depend on capelin to bring to their chicks.
Boris Belchev, a bird guide and ranger on the nearby Hornøya Island, says it's a frightening domino effect.
"I was seeing birds that usually eat fish on the tundra start eating berries because they don't have their normal food,' he said.
With fewer seabirds surviving, those who remain are easy targets for predators like white-tailed eagles, Reiertsen said. Plus, fisheries situated close to the coastal cliff nesting sites can disturb the dynamics of the colonies.
And then there's the threat of bird flu. In 2023, a large outbreak killed some 25,000 kittiwakes alone along the northern Norwegian coast, Reiertsen said.
'It felt like an apocalypse," she said.
Empty nests
Vidar Hansen's seagull hotel in Vardø is one of seven such kittiwake hotels along the Norwegian coast, Reiertsen said.
'It's not an easy task to get the kittiwakes to move in to these hotels,' she said with a laugh.
But it's working. The small seagulls in recent years have migrated deeper into Vardø's center in search of protection from predators. There were roughly 300 kittiwakes nesting in various buildings in the town and now the population there is roughly 1,300, she added.
Before the Vardø hotel, there were "many empty nests around the whole city,' Vidar Hansen said.
Reiertsen said kittiwakes and other seabirds are crucial to the region's ecology. Their droppings bring important nutrients into the sea, and further decreases in their population could be dangerous to the entire ecosystem.
She said officials need to change their mindset from monitoring the problem to figuring out how to fix it. A potential idea, she added, could be limiting or prohibiting fisheries and boat traffic near nesting colonies.
'We don't have much time,' she said. 'We have to act quickly.'
Economic drivers
The seabirds are also key to Vardø's economy.
Just a short boat ride away from Vardø lies Hornøya Island, a birdwatchers' paradise. Thousands of visitors flock to the uninhabited Hornøya, which is home to some 100,000 seabirds nesting there during breeding season, including much-loved Atlantic puffins, common guillemots and razorbills.
But the island's seabird population has also declined dramatically in recent years. There haven't been any recorded common guillemot chicks there since 2018, Belchev said.
'Last summer, I was shocked. 'What's going on here? Where are all the birds?'' he said.
If Norway's government closes the island to the public, or birds stop nesting there and the birdwatchers stop coming, it could have a huge impact on Vardøya Island.
'Every small business in the town, it's depending on the tourists to come and visit the island and stay in the town and shop and use the gas station and use the small restaurants,' Belchev said. __
Dazio reported from Berlin. Tommi Ojala in Vardø, Norway, contributed to this report.
__
The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
3 days ago
- The Guardian
Women's Euro 2025: the best pictures from a dramatic tournament
Norway's Ada Hegerberg (left) celebrates an own goal by Switzerland's Julia Stierli (bottom) at St Jakob-Park on the opening day of the tournament. Photograph: Michael Buholzer/AP Cristiana Girelli and Emma Severini of Italy battle for possession with Marie Detruyer and Sarah Wijnants of Belgium during their Group B match at Stade Tourbillon in Sion. Photograph:Norway and Finland battle at Stade Tourbillon, a beautiful stadium nestled in the Swiss Alps. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Uefa/Getty Images Poland's goalkeeper Kinga Szemik stretches to make a save during the Group C match between Poland and Sweden Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images Grace Clinton (centre) holds off Daniëlle van de Donk, Damaris Egurrola and Victoria Pelova during England's Group D match against the Netherlands. Photograph: Fran Santiago/Uefa/Getty Images France's Marie-Antoinette Katoto eyes the ball during the Group D match against Wales in St Gallen. Photograph: Sébastien Bozon/AFP/Getty Images Lauren James looks on ruefully after missing a chance against the Netherlands but it was a dominant 4-0 win for England in the group stage. Photograph: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images Switzerland and Finland fans mingle outside the Stade de Genève. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters Norway's Signe Gaupset (left) celebrates with Elisabeth Terland after scoring the opening goal against Iceland in Thun. Photograph: Peter Klaunzer/AP Amber Tysiak celebrates Belgium's second 'goal' against Portugal in Group B, before it is disallowed after a VAR review. Photograph: Stéphane Mahé/Reuters Germany's Carlotta Wamser handles the ball against Sweden in Zurich. Wamser was shown a red card and Sweden were awarded a penalty. Photograph: Annegret Hilse/Reuters The braided hair of France's Kadidiatou Diani whips across her face during the warm-up before the Group D match against the Netherlands. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters Delphine Cascarino (left) scores France's fourth goal against the Netherlands under pressure from Dominique Janssen. Photograph: Fran Santiago/Uefa/Getty Images Netherlands v France was a thrilling 5-2 win for the latter, despite Victoria Pelova's early equaliser for the Dutch. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters Some textbook Italian passion on show as Elena Linari and Emma Severini belt out the national anthem before their quarter-final against Norway. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Reuters Hegerberg (right) battles for the ball with the Italy goalkeeper Laura Giuliani. The striker scored a fine goal but also missed a penalty for Norway. Photograph: EurasiaCristiana Girelli scored both goals in a 2-1 win to send Italy past Norway and into the semi-finals. Photograph: Martial Trezzini/EPA A Sweden fan waves the national flag before the quarter-final clash with England at Stadion Letzigrund. Photograph:Lucy Bronze lashes her penalty past Sweden goalkeeper Jennifer Falk during a dramatic shootout which England won 3-2. Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP Sweden's Smilla Holmberg and Fridolina Rolfö console each other after their painful defeat to England. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images Switzerland fans on a pre-match fan march to Stadion Wankdorf in Bern for the hosts' quarter-final against Spain. Photograph: Thomas Hodel/EPA Switzerland and Barcelona midfielder Sydney Schertenleib feels the nerves before the meeting with Spain. Photograph: Maja Hitij/Uefa/Getty Images Switzerland's Viola Calligaris and Géraldine Reuteler embrace after their quarter-final defeat. Photograph: Philipp Kresnik/SheKicks/SPP/Shutterstock Germany's Ann-Katrin Berger makes a remarkable save in extra time against France during their quarter-final. Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Germany win a penalty shootout? Of course. The players celebrate following the team's narrow victory against France. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Uefa/Getty Images England's Chloe Kelly (right) and Michelle Agyemang both scored dramatic goals in extra-time and normal time respectively to send England past Italy into the Euros final. Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Germany's Sophia Kleinherne (right) hurts herself as she makes a last-ditch tackle on Spain's Salma Paralluelo. Photograph: Sébastien Bozon/AFP/Getty Images Spain's Aitana Bonmatí (right) scores from an acute angle in extra-time to sink Germany and set up another final with England. Photograph: Michael Buholzer/AP Spain's players are hyped up to reach the final and celebrate in from of their fans. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA After her trademark run-up, Chloe Kelly laces the winning penalty past Spain's Cata Coll during the shootout to clinch the trophy for England. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters Two England heroes, Chloe Kelly and Michelle Agyemang, take stock of their achievement after the victory over Spain. Photograph:

Telegraph
3 days ago
- Telegraph
The four berry recipes you need this summer – from tarte aux fraises to a simple raspberry sorbet
I've hunted all over northern and central Europe for wild berries, either picking them myself or paying for the fruits of someone else's labour. I eventually got to eat the hardest to find, the cloudberries of Scandinavia (the colour of salmon flesh), on a farm in Norway. I say farm but most of the food they dealt with was wild – fish (Arctic char and trout), reindeer, wild mushrooms and berries. Our first meal there was waffles with ice cream and cloudberries; the berries taste of musky soft apple flesh and were scooped from a big plastic ice-cream tub full of them and their syrup. Our eyes were as wide as dinner plates as our host ladled them on to our waffles. I know they're rare, but clearly not way up high in northern Norway. Even the sweet and simple strawberry – a berry of childhood as it has none of the tartness we come to like when we're older – weaves a kind of magic. In Iceland, where they're grown in geothermally powered greenhouses, you would think that they had special powers. In Scandinavia strawberries are associated with Frigg, the Norse goddess of marriage, who was so possessive that she wanted them all to herself. The Vikings are said to have believed that when a child dies it ascends to heaven as a strawberry. The seeds symbolised the souls of babies. That's not such a sweet idea but it chimes with Goethe's belief that only children and birds knew how strawberries should taste. I find the best in all of them. Strawberries are innocent, I get the tartest cultivated blueberries I can find, cook with wild blackberries when they're in season and love the raspberry most of all – well, apart from the Arctic raspberry, which is known as the 'prince of berries' in Russia. That one's still on my list of 'berries to eat'.


Telegraph
3 days ago
- Telegraph
Why cruising is the most accessible way to travel overseas
It was day one of our week-long cruise to the Norwegian fjords, and barely 90 minutes since we'd handed over our passports at P&O Britannia's accessible check-in quarters, we were already in our cabin. 'How fast was that?' I enthused to my partner, Paul, a wheelchair user since a spinal injury at the age of 21. He nodded enthusiastically, still thrilled that he'd been able to bring a second back-up chair, and by the generously sized wet room which had greeted us. We cracked open our bottle of champagne – part of the 'one bottle of wine per person' we were permitted to bring with us – and settled into our accessible cabin on deck 11, preparing to spend the following day at sea cruising along the inky blue waters off North West England. We used this day to explore the ship, finding that it was – on the whole – wonderfully easy to get around, with plenty of other wheelchair- and scooter-users amongst our fellow passengers, and specific tables at the buffet and lifts between floors reserved for wheelchair users (though not everyone observed these rules). Satisfied that our on-board experience would be a pleasant and easily navigable one, our attentions – and anxieties – turned to whether the same would be true of the various shore excursions ahead. We needn't have worried. P&O had clearly given much forethought to the ports which would prove most accessible for disabled passengers, with each destination offering step-free and (mostly) flat roadways and paths, allowing us to explore each without incident. Amongst our stops were the cities of Stavanger and Kristiansand – both delightful and very scenic – but it was the small farming village of Skjolden which really stood out. Gliding up the calm, crystal clear Sognefjord, we passed tumbling waterfalls and hillsides dotted with pretty wooden homes – then, as we neared the shore, we heard the bells of mountain sheep ringing as farmers toiled their lands nearby. Having disembarked, we followed a beautiful accessible tarmac road which wound around the feet of rugged, snow-capped mountains – a stunning place, and everything we'd hoped a cruise around Norway would offer. We stopped for a picnic at a little bench by the water, taking it all in as other cruisers – on foot, in wheelchairs or on scooters – passed by, deciding which of the various pathways ahead took their fancy as mountain goats and highland cows watched from the nearby fields with interest. That evening, we returned to the ship and watched the sun set from the rear deck, the sky and still waters streaked with the same deep hues of burnt orange and bruised purple. But it wasn't all plain sailing. As we'd been supping our champagne on that very first day, a wheelchair disaster of sorts had been unfolding below us on deck seven. Fellow passenger Alan Rogers, who has multiple sclerosis, had gone for some fresh air on the rear deck in his P&O-approved chair. While rolling himself down a too-steep ramp, he had come crashing out of it and was left lying on deck, helpless and in pain. Paul had tried to access the rear deck via this same ramp some days later, and also found it much too steep, saying that he'd needed two strong men 'to lift up the wheelchair and get me out'. When asked, P&O told us that their safety officer has no issues with the ramp, having recently been aboard the Britannia and found it all in order and within their specifications. 'But why don't they consult the wheelchair users who need these facilities?' says Alan. 'And if the ramps can't be fixed, what about a buzzer to call staff to hold open doors and to hold the wheelchair as you go through them?' P&O's newer ships, he told us, are better on this score. 'My first trip with my wife, Rachel, was on the Iona,' he says of another of the line's ships, launched in 2020. 'It was brilliant, with a decent-sized wetroom and electric buttons to press for the doors and balcony. I don't fly any more, and though cruises are definitely more accessible than a flight, I'm still limited in what I can go on.' He hopes that by speaking out, P&O might be prompted to adjust the ramps on the older ships to ensure the safety of other passengers. Nevertheless, overall Paul and I were impressed. Thanks to the all-encompassing nature of a cruise, this was the first holiday I had successfully organised myself, and the price – £899 per person, including all meals – had been manageable on my part-time salary. This approach also meant that we had been able to entirely avoid flying (which, with Paul's wheelchair and my own mental illness, which makes me claustrophobic in airports, is often an ordeal) or renting a car, but still get right into the heart of the rugged fjords and snowy mountains in all their beauty. Cruising is still a welcome lifeline for many wheelchair users who want to travel – but with just a few small tweaks, it could be even better.