A FAMOUS CURRENT.
"SWITCH "IN THE HUMBOLDT.
EFFECT ON THE PERU ISLANDS
CLIMATIC COXDITIOXS
The Humboldt, or Peruvian Current which has bathed the tropical desert coast of Peru with icy waters and so has given rise to numerous climatic paradoxes, is reported to be changing its l course, working havoc to animal life. A ' steamer captain recently passing up the ■ coast reports that lie encountered thou- j sands of dead birds and fish in the sea.' Other reports state that regions rain-' less for years are having heavy rains and that rivers have formed almost overnight in the one-time parched desert. A bulletin troiti the Washington D.C. headquarters of the National Geographic Society quotes a communication to the society from R. E. Coker telling how ; Peru's cold current has .shaped conditions along the coast. j The Humboldt Current, supplemented : no doubt by the upturning of cold bot- j torn waters, maintains its steady course j for thousands of miles, from icy Ant-1 arctic latitudes to the equator, says the j bulletin. Thus it is that tropical shores are bathed by cold ocean waters, and, with this fundamental contrast the stage is set for an array of phenomena not fully paralleled in any other part of j the world. i Only two events in that interesting! series command present attention. | These are the absence of rainfall and I the consequent accumulation, through centuries, untold of a mine of wealth i which might have been dissipated by a j few seasons of rain. j Guano, it will he understood, is primarily the deposit of fish-eating birds. ! into which may be mixed and incorporated—in greater or less proportion— a variety of other substances, such as the eggs and bodies of birds and the deposit and the bodies of sea-lions. It may be found mixed with gravel and sand in very sinull porportion or sometimes to an extent rendering it unprofitable to extract. " Peruvian guano" is practically synonymous with nitrogenous guano and has long been recognised as a fertiliser of generally high nitrogen value. Consequently a peculiar interest attaches to birds of the Peruvian islands, which have long served to aid the world's agriculture. They are the ; numerous sea-fowl of the coast, which ■ find their abundant food in the ocean and make their nests upon the islands lor points of shore. The peculiar climatic conditions previously mentioned offer merely the pro- | per environmental' conditions for the : preservation of the product. The prii mary requisite for abundant bird life is ' the existence of a plentiful food supply, nnd this is found in the schools of small fish, called anehobetas, that swarm in the Peruvian Current. There "shoals" of fish, acres in extent, are often pursued in' the water by bonitocs and other large fish, while beset from the air by thousands of birds. Pillions of pounds of fish must be consumed each year by the birds, besides the incalculable quantity devoured by other fishes: but the fecundity of the anehobetas is such that their numbers are still maintained. At times great areas of the sea arc made red by mv-lads oi small, brightly coloured shrimp-like Crustacea; and these too play a part of importance as food for the" fishes and birds. , Xot all the birds are of equal importance from the commercial point of view • Indeed, three species virtually support i the guano industry at the present time '—the white-breast cormorant (guanay), j the big gray pelican and the white-head jrnnnet. _
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LVI, Issue 187, 10 August 1925, Page 9
Word Count
576A FAMOUS CURRENT. Auckland Star, Volume LVI, Issue 187, 10 August 1925, Page 9
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