Only one small problem with this press release below.
In 2010, the US government considered, then decided not to add the American pika under the US Endangered Species Act;in the IUCN Red List it is still considered a Species of Least Concern Link here
But, don’t let that stop anyone from claiming extinctions.
From this article on MNN:…
…the pikas’ preference for elevated cold-weather habitats has persisted for 15 million years.
I wonder how these little guys survived the Roman Warm Period and the Medieval Warm Period….and 1934…and… How can they do that? Hmmm maybe they… adapt? I’ve seen them in the California lava beds, mentioned below in this contradictory Wikipedia paragraph:
Pikas can die in six hours when exposed to temperatures above 25.5°C (77.9°F) if individuals cannot find refuge from heat. In warmer environments, such as during midday sun and at lower elevation limits, pikas typically become inactive and withdraw into cooler talus openings.[13] Because of behavioral adaptation, American pikas also persist in the hot climates of Craters of the Moon and Lava Beds National Monuments (Idaho and California, respectively). Average and extreme maximum surface temperatures in August at these sites are 32°C (90°F) and 38°C (100°F), respectively [14]
Another factor, from answers.com “What are the pika’s predators?”
Some of the Pika’s predators are: bobcats, coyotes, eagles, hawks, foxes, and weasel’s.
Hmmm. I hear the American Eagle is making a big comeback. The Bobcats seem to have rebounded well, coyotes are on the increase, despite control efforts, foxes are making a comeback after a poison was banned, at least in Wyoming. Nah, couldn’t be any of that, it must be global warming.
Look for a “save the cute little Pika from the global warming” campaign soon. Here’s the press release:
Contemporary climate change alters the pace and drivers of extinction
Local extinction rates of American pikas have increased nearly five-fold in the last 10 years, and the rate at which the climate-sensitive species is moving up mountain slopes has increased 11-fold, since the 20th century, according to a study soon to be published in Global Change Biology.
The research strongly suggests that the American pika’s distribution throughout the Great Basin is changing at an increasingly rapid rate. The pika (Ochotona princeps), a small, hamster-looking animal sensitive to climate, occurs commonly in rocky talus slopes and lava flows throughout the western U.S. The study demonstrates a dramatic shift in the range of this rabbit relative, and illustrates the increasingly important role of climate in the loss of local pika populations across the nearly 150,000 square miles of the hydrological Great Basin.
The authors investigated data across 110 years on pika distribution and 62 years of data on regional climate to first describe the patterns of local pika loss, and then examined strength of evidence for multiple competing hypotheses to explain why the losses are occurring. They found that among 25 sites in the Basin with 20th-century records of pikas, a species dependent on cool, high-mountain habitats, nearly half (four of ten) of the local pika extinctions have occurred after 1999. In addition, since 1999 the animals are moving up mountain slopes at an average (Basin-wide) rate of about 145 m (475 feet) per decade, as compared with an estimated Basin-wide average of about 13 m per decade during the 20th century. In contrast, a recent (2003) review found that worldwide, species demonstrating distributional shifts averaged upslope movement of 6.1 m per decade. The species does not seem to be losing ground everywhere across its geographic range, but at least in the Great Basin, it may be one of a group of species that can act as ‘early-warning’ indicators of how distributions of species may shift in the future.
The study’s most novel scientific contribution was that the factors apparently driving the local-extinction process were strongly different during the 20th Century than during 1999-2008. This may mean that knowledge of past population dynamics of a particular species may not always help researchers predict how and why distributions change in the future. That is, the rules of the ‘extinction game’ seem to be shifting. This study was distinctive in that it relied upon fieldwork across an entire region rather than at just a few sites; had temperature data from the talus spaces that were previously or currently occupied by pikas (rather than simply estimated temperatures from weather recorders far from the study sites); and had three periods of data collection, which allowed for comparison of dynamics during the two intervening periods. Unlike most other mammals that have attracted management and conservation attention in the past, pikas are not widely hunted, don’t require large areas of habitat for their individual home ranges, and live in remote high-elevation areas that experience a smaller array of land uses than that experienced by other species. Additionally, with a few localized exceptions, these pika losses have occurred without significant change in the amount or geographic arrangement of their rocky talus habitat. Habitat loss or degradation has typically been the most common cause of species decline, not only in mammals, but also among all animals. In addition to being sentinels, pikas are important because they are food for an array of animals, and as the ‘ecosystem engineers’ that they are, their presence affects the local plant composition and nutrient distributions.
Global Change Biology exists to promote understanding of the interface between all aspects of current environmental change and biological systems, including rising tropospheric O3 and CO2 concentrations, climate change, loss of biodiversity, and eutrophication. For more information please visit www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/gcb and twitter.com/GCBiology
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The full paper is available online here at HTML and as PDF
Interestingly, the word predator only occurs once, in this sentence:
The species also serves as prey for an array of aerial and terrestrial predators (Smith & Weston, 1990), whose nutritional and foraging ecologies may be affected by local losses of O. princeps.
The word predation appears once also, in the Conclusions section:
The greatest progress in illuminating mechanisms of climate acting on species will be achieved by investigations that satisfy not only a–e above, but also that investigate physiology of affected individuals (Reeder & Kramer, 2005), in-depth demography (Réale et al., 2003), and synecological relationships such as disease, predation pressure, and competition from other species that may also be undergoing changes in abundance or distribution in response to climate change (LaVal, 2004; Pounds et al., 2006).
And right after that, comes this:
Given the immediacy and pervasiveness of climate-change effects on biotas and the new rule-sets governing distributional change that contemporary climate change has wrought, investigators and policy-makers may be forced to use ‘shortcuts’ for prioritizing actions.
Well gosh, there’s no point in looking at any other variables, like maybe increased predation, it’s a given that climate-change is the cause of the “Pika tragedy”. They apparently don’t need to prove such a well known thing, let’s go straight to the shortcuts!
I’m reminded of the global warming is killing the frogs story that turned out to be bogus, and the toads too.
Like the frogs did, Pikas also get that silly “canary in the coal mine” label, which is almost a sure sign they have it wrong.

I discussed the battles about the protection of pikas, and the misinformation that some environmentalists are producing, a year ago:
http://motls.blogspot.com/2010/02/us-pika-not-endangered-sciam-panic.html
REPLY: Thanks Lubos, I missed that. But then again I don’t visit your website much because it’s so busy it hurts my eyes to read it and sometimes crashes my browser. It’s like a psychedelic string theory lava lamp on acid. 😉
On the plus side, the content you have is truly top notch stuff. I just wish it didn’t make my head hurt to read it. – Anthony
“pikas are not widely hunted”
LOL. If they mean by people, no kidding.
I have had plenty of experience with these animals, including too many hours watching (and photographing) them at close range and tons of time in their habitat.
After giving this some thought, here’s the only logical explanation I can come up with for these extirpations (other than the researchers themselves either introducing pathogens or parasites – a real possibility – or just generally screwing up their lives).
The predator angle that Anthony alluded to makes most sense. And the most effective predator of these pikas are weasels, which can go anywhere that pikas can, and can and do hunt them year round (pikas stay active through the winter living on stored food). Weasels and all the pikas potential mammal predators (all ‘fur bearers’) are all at high population levels… and far, far higher than they were during the old fur trade days or anytime recently.
And, as Anthony noted, golden eagle and other raptor populations which would hunt pikas are also at high population levels, including the ones which migrate in the alpine and high areas of the Rockies. But because of their warning systems, those birds probably don’t get many.
So… since nobody was actually counting pikas until recently, that means that their baseline population was probably unnaturally high due to the previous reduction in their predators.
But they are also saying that whole local populations are disappearing. That could also be an earlier expansion reverting to ‘natural.’
Finally, look at where this study area is. On the margins of pika range. So fixating on the plight of these populations is like fixating on the world’s most southerly polar bear population in Hudson Bay – irrelevant to the rest of their populations, but a prime opportunity to turn any changes on the fringe into a fake poster child.
Moreover, in that region there are many isolated mountains with, presumably isolated habitats and populations. That makes them naturally more vulnerable to extirpation.
Note: I haven’t done my homework on this to look into the specific details because I can’t be bothered investigating these silly stories too much. They usually just go away.
I have vacationed in the San Juans of Southwestern Colorado practically every summer since the early 1970s. The pika population is the same as it ever was, as near as I can tell. They are hard to spot but you can’t miss their squeak calls if you have good hearing. But one of the more entertaining aspects in the last several years is that I had to time my visits a bit later in July so that the 4×4 jeep tours I take could actually transverse the Imogene and Black Bear passes, because that’s how late they’ve been blocked by snow.
I’d think the pikas would have to move down in elevation if the tops of the mountains are getting a tad more inhospitable…..
Wikipedia agrees, so it must be true:
“Over 99% of documented species are now extinct,[2]”
2 Fichter, George S. (1995). Endangered Animals. USA: Golden Books Publishing Company. pp. 5. ISBN 1-58238-138-0.
” In addition, since 1999 the animals are moving up mountain slopes at an average (Basin-wide) rate of about 145 m (475 feet) per decade,”
How can you have a decadal average with only one decade?
Cooling for Pikas: http://www.appinsys.com/GlobalWarming/GW_4CE_Animals.htm#pika
These animals have survived for 15m years. All those warm periods, many much warmer than today, and now they are in danger from warming. What rubbish.
And as for animals climbing mountains to get away from rising temperatures??? What rubbish. Animals are not that stupid and they will follow a good food source in preference to some mythical temperature choice.
Another money/grant raising scam.
Yet another cute furry animal we must save by destroying our economies …
I find it despicable how conservation activists put whatever the flavour of the month happens to be above the needs of the poorest people, in our developed societies and even more so in the developing countries.
How can it be right to make people, especially in Africa, live without affordable energy because of the chimera of AGW and CO2?
What they are really saying is that the lives of a handful of picas (or frogs/toads/polar bears) are more valuable than that of humans living in poverty.
On the other hand they don’t say a word about the species brought ever closer to extinction, like Orang Utangs, because it is better they lose their habitat to ever more palm-oil plantations in order that a minuscule amount of CO2 in their car fuels can be cut.
Do these ‘advocates’ have any conscience at all?
Anthony Watts says:
Only one small problem with this press release below.
From Wikipedia:
In 2010, the US government considered, then decided not to add the American pika under the US Endangered Species Act;in the IUCN Red List it is still considered a Species of Least Concern Link here
But, don’t let that stop anyone from claiming extinctions.
Species endagerment does not neccesarily follow from the extiction of local populations.
Anthony Watts says:
From this article on MNN:…
…the pikas’ preference for elevated cold-weather habitats has persisted for 15 million years.
I wonder how these little guys survived the Roman Warm Period and the Medieval Warm Period….and 1934…and… How can they do that? Hmmm maybe they… adapt?
Would they have to, is there any proof that the MWP and 1934 were so warm that North America had no elevated cold-weather habitats?
Anthony Watts says:
I’ve seen them in the California lava beds, mentioned below in this contradictory Wikipedia paragraph:
Pikas can die in six hours when exposed to temperatures above 25.5°C (77.9°F) if individuals cannot find refuge from heat. In warmer environments, such as during midday sun and at lower elevation limits, pikas typically become inactive and withdraw into cooler talus openings.[13] Because of behavioral adaptation, American pikas also persist in the hot climates of Craters of the Moon and Lava Beds National Monuments (Idaho and California, respectively). Average and extreme maximum surface temperatures in August at these sites are 32°C (90°F) and 38°C (100°F), respectively [14]
Sorry, where in the press release is any or this contradicted?
Anthony Watts says:
Another factor, from answers.com “What are the pika’s predators?”
Some of the Pika’s predators are: bobcats, coyotes, eagles, hawks, foxes, and weasel’s.
Hmmm. I hear the American Eagle is making a big comeback. The Bobcats seem to have rebounded well, coyotes are on the increase, despite control efforts, foxes are making a comeback after a poison was banned, at least in Wyoming. Nah, couldn’t be any of that, it must be global warming.
And, of course, famously, none of these predators can climb or fly so the natural response of prey to an increase in their numbers is increased elevation….
REPLY:Gosh Kev, a new record for bloviation for you in a single comment. I understand that in order to maintain your faith, you must denounce previous warm periods. Can’t have those. Point #2 read the text again, the Wikipedia paragraph is self contradictory, you are arguing a strawman. #3 Hmmm let’s see, if you are a predator….do you start at the top of the mountain and work your way down? Or, from the bottom up, concentrating prey at the top? If you are under siege, do you take the high ground, or the low ground? If you are a Pika, having a swarm of scientists visiting your neighborhood, leaving strange scents poking temperature probes into your favorite holes, do you stick around and watch, or hightail it outta there? – Anthony
Luboš Motl @ur momisugly April 20, 2011 at 11:24 pm AND
Indur M. Goklany @ur momisugly April 20, 2011 at 7:52 pm
Very nicely put!
Here in SE Australia, we have some very colourful birds, some with remarkable behaviour/attitude/humour, but I fear that one species previously common in my garden has become extinct.
Please click this URL for some interesting images and weep with me over the 6th (?) great extinction!
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5303/5640400620_919e228f12_b.jpg
Bob Fernley-Jones
Do they breed like their ancestor, big daddy rabbit, too?
When the crazed climate communist hippie parade, in their delusional anthropogenic dystopic wet fantasy, is alarmed of the catastrophic decline of the common city rat, then I’ll worry if it starts to stink more ‘an usual and there ain’t no waste management strikes going on what with the parade always seems to lack empirical evidence. But of course the pot parade wouldn’t believe in such “observed” folly, anyhow. :p
Here is an astute observation about global warming and animals.
Suzuki is an eternal pessemist.
What use are experts?
Typo:
I meant pessimist
Apparently it is cooling in Pika areas.
http://www.appinsys.com/GlobalWarming/GW_4CE_Animals.htm#pika
[Includes a demolition job ;O)]
Re: Luboš Motl’s comment on April 20, 2011 at 11:24 pm and Anthony’s reply
Ack! I followed Motl’s link to see just how bad it looked, just in case Anthony was slightly exaggerating.
Pink and white Japanese anime kittens for the page background.
It’s worse than was thought. Much worse.
Anthony, for the sake of your fellow humans, please append a warning note to the sidebar link to Motl’s site: (may induce nausea)
This just gets so tiring. The amount of panic, over and over again, coming from the alarmists is wearying.
If we could find a way to harness even a tenth of the energy they expend in a months’ worth of panicking, we could solve the world’s energy problems for the next millenia.
Is it possible to hollow them out? two of them would make a nice pair of slippers.
Hmmm, i wonder if there`s a market?
David Schofield says:
April 21, 2011 at 1:22 am
” In addition, since 1999 the animals are moving up mountain slopes at an average (Basin-wide) rate of about 145 m (475 feet) per decade,”
How can you have a decadal average with only one decade?
Answer:
Computer model.
🙂
What do they taste like?
kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
April 21, 2011 at 6:20 am
Re: Luboš Motl’s comment on April 20, 2011 at 11:24 pm and Anthony’s reply
Ack! I followed Motl’s link to see just how bad it looked, just in case Anthony was slightly exaggerating.
Pink and white Japanese anime kittens for the page background.
It’s worse than was thought. Much worse.
Do I sense an imminent extirpation?
I’ll volunteer to save at least two breeding pairs at my house. They are ADORABLE! I’ve always wanted a pet pika.
If I’m not mistaken if a creatures predatory population increases isn’t it due, amongst other things, mainly to an increase in the population of the prey? At least that’s what I was taught in my 5th grade zoo trip.
REPLY:Gosh Kev, a new record for bloviation for you in a single comment. I understand that in order to maintain your faith, you must denounce previous warm periods.
I understand to maintain your faith, you have to misrepresent anyone who challenges it, I didn’t denounce any previous warming periods.
REPLY:Point #2 read the text again, the Wikipedia paragraph is self contradictory, you are arguing a strawman.
Sorry, my mistake, I retract the comment, but fail to see why, when you recognise what a strawman is, why you would employ one yourself and then immediately point out somone elses; double standards?
REPLY: and #3? – Anthony
banjo says:
Is it possible to hollow them out? two of them would make a nice pair of slippers.
Hmmm, i wonder if there`s a market?
Pika-shoes?