Heat, no food, deadly weather: Climate change kills seabirds

FILE - A Cassin's auklet chick is displayed at the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge, in San Francisco, July 8, 2006. Mass die-offs of the small, white-bellied gray birds have been reported from British Columbia to San Luis Obispo, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, File)

FILE - An Atlantic puffin comes in for a landing on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine, July 21, 2019. The Atlantic puffin, Maine's iconic seabird, suffered one of their worst years for reproduction in decades during the summer of 2021, due to a lack of the small fish they eat. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

FILE - A puffin prepares to land with a bill full of fish on Eastern Egg Rock off the Maine coast. Puffins died at an alarming rate from starvation because of a shortage of herring. The warming of the planet is taking a deadly toll on seabirds that are suffering population declines because of lack of fish to eat, inability to reproduce, heat waves and extreme weather. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

FILE - A mating pair of northern gannets nuzzle on Bonaventure Island off the Gaspe Peninsula, July 31, 2017, in Quebec, Canada. The warming of the planet is taking a deadly toll on seabirds that are suffering population declines because of lack of fish to eat, inability to reproduce, heat waves and extreme weather. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

Laysan albatrosses do a mating dance on Midway Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Birds suffering due to climate-related causes include albatrosses off the Hawaiian islands, northern gannets near Canada and puffins off the Maine coast. (AP Photo/Lucy Pemoni, File)

PORTLAND, Maine — The warming of the planet is taking a deadly toll on seabirds that are suffering population declines from starvation, inability to reproduce, heat waves and extreme weather.