Sand dunes disappear with more frequent and powerful storms in Western Alaska. These storms have impacted bird nesting grounds and tundra plants.
Observation from Sandra Hill:
I grew up here in Hooper Bay, Alaska doing subsistence activities. I've noticed many changes in my life, so far. One is erosion. When I was a small girl, there used to be 5 rows of dunes along our coast. Now, there's only 2 on the west side, and sadly, only 1 row on the Southside.
After Merbok, we lost so much coastline, and saltwater flooded our land. I no longer see a type of green I used to gather among the dunes. I also no longer hear or see the American Plover which used to nest in the dunes. They've always nested here along our immediate coast, but because of the loss of the dunes, they're not nesting here anymore. I don't see or hear a single one this summer. People have seen them, but they go north of us, so they're still nesting in the area, but no longer among the dunes I grew up in.
Update - Sandra writes:
I did find a late pair of plovers nesting in the dunes after all. My guess is that was their second clutch. For a pair to nest so late could only mean their first clutch was found and taken. The plovers are too rare to see up close. The ones here resemble to Pacific Golden Plover the most. We also have semipalmated plovers that nest along the beach, and sometimes on hard tundra. I'm sure you have the right name for it, we call it nunapik. Those are also becoming rare because of human interaction.
LEO Says:
The impacts from Merbok continue to change our landscape. We reached out to USGS in Anchorage. There are four different species of plovers. Here are a few interesting characteristics of plovers by USGS: Semipalmated Plovers are small and look a lot different than the other three but they do like to nest in dunes. Black-bellied Plovers are large and noisy during breeding and they also nest near the coast but more likely in tundra patches. The two species of golden plovers, one of which is American Golden-Plovers Pacific, tend to nest in tundra habitats. Pacific Golden-Plovers look a lot like Americans but they both have distinct calls and breeding displays. For more details on each species and a paper on the vast diversity of Arctic-breeding shorebirds in the climate sensitive Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta navigate the links in the sidebar.