Climate Change Alters Shapes of Amazonian Birds

An aerial view shows a deforested area of the Amazonia rainforest in Labrea, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sep. 15, 2021. (AFP Photo)
An aerial view shows a deforested area of the Amazonia rainforest in Labrea, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sep. 15, 2021. (AFP Photo)
TT

Climate Change Alters Shapes of Amazonian Birds

An aerial view shows a deforested area of the Amazonia rainforest in Labrea, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sep. 15, 2021. (AFP Photo)
An aerial view shows a deforested area of the Amazonia rainforest in Labrea, Amazonas state, Brazil, Sep. 15, 2021. (AFP Photo)

Climate change is causing some Amazonian birds to shapeshift. A new study found rainforest avians have become smaller with longer wings in response to warming temperatures.

Climate change is shape-shifting the bodies of birds in the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest, a concerning new study shows.

Researchers have found several bird species have become smaller with longer wings over several generations in response to hotter and drier conditions, Britain’s The Daily Mail reported.

Smaller bodies are more efficient at dissipating heat, while bigger wings reduce the amount of metabolic heat generated to stay aloft. Affected species include the golden-crowned spadebill, the gray antwren, McConnell's flycatcher and the dusky-throated antshrike.

Adapting to shifting environmental conditions may include 'new physiological or nutritional challenges' for birds, say the scientists, who claim to have eliminated other factors that may have influenced these changes – in other words, there's no doubt climate change is to blame.

"Even in the middle of this pristine Amazon rainforest, we are seeing the global effects of climate change caused by people, including us," said study author Vitek Jirinec, an ecologist at the Integral Ecology Research Center, Blue Lake, California.

Jirinec and colleagues studied data collected on more than 15,000 individual birds that were captured, measured, weighed, marked with a leg band and released, over 40 years of field work in Brazilian Amazonia, at a research location near the city of Manaus.

In total, the scientists investigated 77 species of rainforest birds that live there, from the cool, dark forest floor to the warmer, sunlit midstory.

The midstory is the layer of vegetation in a forest consisting of trees with a height somewhere between the heights of the smallest and tallest trees.

The data revealed nearly all of the birds' bodies have reduced in mass, or become lighter, since the 1980s. All species studied currently have a lower average mass than they did in the early 1980s.



UK Designer’s Long-lost Coat Found after 40 Years

Jean Pallant said she is ‘over the moon’ one of her long-lost designs was found in an Oxfam charity shop (Seb Durocher/Oxfam/PA)
Jean Pallant said she is ‘over the moon’ one of her long-lost designs was found in an Oxfam charity shop (Seb Durocher/Oxfam/PA)
TT

UK Designer’s Long-lost Coat Found after 40 Years

Jean Pallant said she is ‘over the moon’ one of her long-lost designs was found in an Oxfam charity shop (Seb Durocher/Oxfam/PA)
Jean Pallant said she is ‘over the moon’ one of her long-lost designs was found in an Oxfam charity shop (Seb Durocher/Oxfam/PA)

A British fashion designer has revealed one of her long-lost designs has been found in an Oxfam charity shop - nearly 40 years after it went missing from the designer’s warehouse, The Independent reported.

When designer Jean Pallant was told her one-of-a-kind coat had turned up in a donation bag at the Oxfam shop in Mill Hill, London, she was “very excited,” the newspaper said.

“I was absolutely over the moon, really. It was very sweet of the person who discovered it to believe that it was something important,” she was quoted as saying.

“It’s like seeing a child. It’s lovely. I know every single square inch of it, and I’m absolutely amazed that it looks so new, and it feels new. Everything about it looks exactly as it did when it went missing.”

Oxfam’s Mill Hill shop manager Marina Ikey-Botchway said she could tell the coat was a priceless item when the donation came in.

She made the discovery among a donation of high street fast fashion clothes.

“The very first second I saw the coat I knew this was something special, so I checked the label and after a quick Google found Jean’s email,” she said.

Pallant, who was part of the 1960s cultural revolution and one half of a husband-and-wife team, made the orange coat with large buttons on her kitchen table in 1988 and it featured in a Sunday Telegraph article that year.

When she went to retrieve some pieces from her warehouse nearly four decades ago, she felt “sick” to discover that the coat had gone missing along with five other pieces she had designed with her husband Martin, which still have not been found.

“It doesn’t look as if it’s ever been worn, so I’m thrilled about that as well. It doesn’t look like a rag. It doesn’t even smell of must, which is weird. I don’t know where it’s been for those years, but it’s obviously been well cared for,” said Pallant.