By TODD McLEISH/ecoRI News contributor
Fisher cat dashing through my back yard (photo by Will Collette) |
Local biologists agree
that most species of wildlife that spend their winters in Rhode Island are well
adapted to weather the cold. They have evolved numerous strategies to deal with
the conditions, from hibernation and torpor to thick fur coats and layers of
fat.
Birds, for instance,
have developed a number of adaptations that enable them to survive the extreme
cold.
Photo by Will Collette |
The warm blood flowing
down to their feet warms up the cold blood flowing back to their core, and the
blood in their feet is so cold that the difference between their foot
temperature and the ice ensures that they lose little heat through their feet.
Birds also huddle
together to stay warm, fluff up their feathers to provide an insulating layer
around them, and lower their body temperature to save energy.
But not all birds are
prepared for the cold.
“Most sensible birds
will migrate to warmer places, thereby avoiding having to contend with the
cold,” McWilliams said.
Some of those that stick
around, however, “are less well-insulated or otherwise poorly adapted to living
in cold places.”
He noted the Carolina
wren, a southern species that has expanded its range northward in recent
decades, as an example. Southern New England is at the northern part of its
range, and during extreme and extended cold spells in Rhode Island, many of the
birds don’t survive.
That was the case during
the winter of 2015, when the state had a record snowfall and Rhode Island’s
Carolina wren population declined. When favorable weather returns, however, the
wren population bounces back again until the next severe winter.
Photo by Will Collette |
Wood frogs, for instance, have what some scientists call “antifreeze” in their blood that enables their tissues to freeze solid without harmful effects. In some winters, the frogs experience several freeze-thaw cycles.
Herpetologist Scott
Buchanan said adult painted turtles, snapping turtles, and spotted turtles are
also extremely cold tolerant and will likely fare well. But some painted turtle
hatchlings, which overwinter in their nest cavity, may die if the temperatures
are extreme for an extended period of time.
“The invasive red-eared
slider, on the other hand, is less tolerant of extreme cold — both the adults
and hatchlings,” Buchanan said. “Hatchlings, which also overwinter in the nest,
are more vulnerable to these cold periods and would exhibit a greater rate of
mortality than painteds or snappers.
“From a conservation
perspective, this would be a good thing, as it would slow down the invasion.”
Wildlife that lives in
the upper layer of the soil or in the grass at the surface may be particularly
vulnerable to extreme cold, especially cold temperatures without a thick layer
of snow to serve as insulation.
David Gregg, director of
the Rhode Island Natural History Survey, speculated that the dearth of leaves
on the ground — thanks to two years of gypsy moth defoliation — may mean there
will be less insulation for species that hibernate in the forest floor, such as
box turtles and salamanders.
“Low temps and thin snow
is also probably tough for small mammals like voles, which tunnel around in the
grass,” Gregg said before the Jan. 4 blizzard. “Of course, that might make life
easier for owls and hawks that need to be able to find voles.”
He also wondered about
the impact of the cold weather on aquatic mammals, when all of the local ponds
are frozen solid. During the week before New Year’s, he twice observed a
muskrat wander up from a nearby frozen river to scratch for food in his lawn.
And in the winter of 2015, a river otter emerged from the same frozen river to
forage in Gregg’s compost pit.
Charles Brown, a
wildlife biologist with the Rhode Island Department of Environmental
Management, isn’t worried about those aquatic mammals, however. He said the
range of muskrats, river otters, and beavers extends far to the north in
Canada, where they likely experience much longer periods of extreme cold than
they do in southern New England.
“So around here, they’re
probably living the easy life,” he said.
Those animals typically
gravitate to areas of moving water, like dams and spillways, during extreme
cold, Brown said, and otters can even chew holes in the ice to gain access to
pond water.
Brown is more concerned
about how big brown bats will fare. He noted that most bat species that spend
time in Rhode Island migrate to caves to hibernate or travel south to warmer
climates to avoid the winter conditions. Big brown bats are the only species
that lives in the state all year. And even those should survive without much
difficulty.
“We’ve had some pretty
cold winters in the past, but rarely have I ever seen any evidence of bats
dying from exposure,” he said.
The big picture,
according to Gregg, is that the creatures that winter in the state do so for a
reason, and there’s probably a logical reason for those that don’t survive the
chill.
“I think that hard cold
like this helps to hold back the northward expansion of southern species, like
fire ants, kudzu, and lizards,” he said. “The kind of animals and plants we
think of as typical here are either helped or hurt in the appropriate ways by
cold, so the net effect is good even though there are animals and plants that
go up and others down.”
Rhode Island resident
and author Todd McLeish runs a wildlife blog.