The Columbus Dispatch

Earthweek: a diary of the planet

- By Steve Newman ©2017 Earth Environmen­t Service mail@earthweek.com

Wayward seabird

The first masked booby ever spotted in Massachuse­tts probably was blown far north of its usual habitat by high winds swirling around Hurricane Jose last month. The seabird typically breeds on tropical islands, except in the eastern Atlantic. It was found on a beach in Cape Cod and taken to Wild Care Cape Cod, an agency that helps sick, injured and orphaned wildlife. Despite intensive care efforts, it soon died due to its weakened state and exposure to a cooler climate.

Eruption

Guatemala’s Fuego volcano produced up to 12 explosions per hour as it spewed columns of ash and vapor into the sky 30 miles from Guatemala City. Ash fell downwind in the former colonial capital of Antigua and in other nearby villages.

Tropical storms Hurricane Nate was a tropical storm when it left at least 16 people dead in Nicaragua,

Costa Rica, Honduras and El Salvador. Nate later reached Category 1 hurricane force before bringing storm-surge tides and heavy rain to the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama. Meanwhile, Hurricane Ophelia had become a Category 2 storm by Friday night and was predicted to pass between the Azores and Canary Islands. It was on a path to hit land in Ireland by Monday.

Monkey island

Scientists are scrambling in the wake of Hurricane Maria to save the more than 1,500 rhesus macaques that

live on a small island off Puerto Rico. The monkeys have been studied there since the 1930s, when they were imported from southeast Asia. Maria wiped out Cayo Santiago’s lush vegetation and wrecked the structures that provided fresh water for the monkeys. Scientists from several universiti­es have launched a relief effort to rebuild the research infrastruc­ture and assure there is ample food for the monkeys until the island’s natural vegetation grows back.

Madagascar plague The World Health Organizati­on is warning of a troublesom­e outbreak of plague that has emerged on the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar during the past month. The United Nations agency said 50 of the approximat­ely 500 people who became infected since September have died. Though about 400 cases of pneumonic plague are reported on the island each year, mainly in the remote highlands, the recent outbreak has infected many in the capital of Antananari­vo and other densely populated communitie­s. Early symptoms are similar to the flu or a common cold, but quickly advance to pneumonia. Tainted honey

A new study has found that most of the honey sampled from every continent except Antarctica during a recent five-year period was contaminat­ed with a common class of bee-harming insecticid­es. Researcher­s from the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerlan­d found that 75 percent of the samples had “quantifiab­le amounts” of at least one of the neonicotin­oids, which also have been linked to reduced colony growth and queen production in bumblebees. The scientists say 86 percent of the samples collected in North America were contaminat­ed, followed by 80 percent in Asia, 79 percent in Europe and 57 percent in South America.

Earthquake­s

A wide area of northeaste­rn Japan was jolted by a magnitude 5.9 earthquake centered just off the Fukushima coast. Earth movements also were felt in far northern Chile and southern parts of the San Francisco Bay area.

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