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Ship Traffic in the Now-Open Northwest Passage Endangers Narwhals, Other Unique Animals

A pod of narwhals
A pod of narwhals (Monodon monoceros) in central Baffin Bay. Narwhals are the most vulnerable animals to increased ship traffic in the Arctic during September.
(Image credit: Kristin Laidre/ NOAA/OAR/OER)

Most Americans associate fall with football and raking leaves, but in the Arctic this season is about ice. Every year, floating sea ice in the Arctic thins and melts in spring and summer, then thickens and expands in fall and winter.

As climate change warms the Arctic, its sea ice cover is declining. This year, scientists estimate that the Arctic sea ice minimum in late September covered 1.77 million square miles (4.59 million square kilometers), tying the sixth lowest summertime minimum on record.

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University of Alaska Fairbanks; Harry Stern