Monthly Archives: June 2019

Tufted Puffins Warn Us of Our Changing Climate

Tufted puffins are shouting a warning from the middle of the Bering Sea, and we need to listen to them. As our oceans warm, these beautiful birds are starving to death.

Alaska’s four Pribilof Islands sit between mainland Alaska and Russia. The islands support more than two million seabirds, which survive by feeding on plankton and fish in the nutrient-rich Bering Sea. With so many birds in one area, it’s not unusual to occasionally find dead ones, but alarm bells sounded when biologists learned more than 350 dead birds had washed up on the beaches of St. Paul Island, the largest of the Pribilof Islands. This number is seventy times higher than the annual average count of five bird carcasses. Stranger still, most of these dead birds were tufted puffins, a bird that rarely washes up on the beach after it dies.

Biologists knew the birds they’d found dead represented only a fraction of the total, so they applied a computer model using wind patterns and ocean currents to determine what percentage of the dead birds likely reached the shore. From this percentage, they calculated somewhere between 3,150 and 8,800 birds perished in late 2016. Even if you choose to believe the low end of this estimate, the numbers are astounding.

Two species of puffins live in Alaskan waters.  The horned puffin (Fratercula corniculata) and the tufted puffin (Fratercula cirrhata) belong to the family Alcidae, which also includes guillemots, murres, murrelets, auklets, and auks. A tufted puffin has a black body, a white face, and a red and yellow bill.  Its common name is derived from the long tufts of yellow feathers curling back from behind the eye on each side of the head.  Adult tufted puffins measure 14 inches (36 cm) in length and weigh 1.7 lbs. (771 g).

What killed the puffins?

The dead birds recovered from the beach appeared emaciated with weak flight muscles and almost no body fat. The birds had starved to death, but why?

Puffins feed on small fish, and until recently, many resided in the Pribilof Islands so they could gorge themselves on the abundance of fish in the rich Bering Sea. The icy Bering Sea is rapidly changing, though, as the ocean warms. As the sea ice recedes and thins, pollock, cod, and other fish can no longer find the super-cooled water at the edges of the ice sheet where they like to congregate. Instead, the fish disperse, making them more difficult for puffins to find and catch. Puffins now must travel further to find food, burning precious calories.

Also, as the northern ocean warms, dominant plankton species have shifted from large, meaty forms to smaller less energy-rich species. In turn, the plankton-eating fish are also thinner and provide fewer nutrients to the animals that eat them.

Puffins molt from August to October, and as they replace their feathers, the birds can barely fly and dive, making it difficult to feed themselves unless prey species are plentiful. Biologists were not surprised to learn most of the dead puffins they found on the beaches were in the middle of molting. The birds couldn’t travel far to travel to find food while molting, and they starved to death.

Puffins are not the only species affected by the loss of sea ice in the Bering Sea, and the diminished food source is not the only issue related to the melting ice. Without sea ice clinging to the coast, winter storms now batter the rocky cliffs, causing erosion at an unprecedented rate. These cliffs provide homes for seabirds, and some of the rocky beaches are breeding sites for endangered Steller sea lions.

The Pribilof Islands are a distant place most humans will never visit, but the drama playing out on those remote islands demands our attention now. The puffins are trying to tell us our environment is changing at an alarming rate.


Robin Barefield is the author of three Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter. To download a free copy of one of her novels, watch her webinar about how she became an author and why she writes Alaska wilderness mysteries. Also, sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska, and listen to her podcast Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.

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True Crime Podcasts

In my last post, I announced the premiere of my true crime podcast titled, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier. One of the reasons I started a true crime podcast is because I am a fan of murder and mystery podcasts, so this week, I thought I’d tell you about some of my favorites and how they inspired me to begin my own podcast.

True crime podcasts take a variety of formats from a sleek sound production including interviews with those who had firsthand knowledge of the crime to dramatic recreations of events to a simple retelling of the facts of the crime. Some crime podcasts are seasonal with each season devoted to a particular murder or murderer. In these podcasts, the host breaks down the crime and the investigation. Other murder podcasts take an unsolved murder and attempt to solve it over the course of the season. Still, others involve a group of law enforcement experts discussing the pros and cons of the investigation of the crime.

The true crime genre is popular across all media formats. Take a look at the many true crime TV shows, including Dateline and 48 Hours. True crime books are immensely popular. I write a true crime newsletter, and you’ll find several true crime magazines at the newsstand. With its overwhelming popularity, it is no surprise true crime is also a major theme for podcasts.

I have not yet listened to a seasonal podcast devoted to a deep dive into one crime or one criminal, but several stand out in the rankings, including Someone Knows Something, Up and Vanished, and Accused.

If you like humor with your murder, check out White Wine True Crime or My Favorite Murder.

My favorite true crime podcasts are Sword and Scale, Criminal, Generation Why, True Crime Historian, and Casefile True Crime.

Sword and Scale is not for the squeamish. The polished, well-researched podcast takes a hard look at the most gruesome crimes.

Criminal simply does a great job of reporting well-researched crimes in a straight-forward manner.

Generation Why involves two hosts named Aaron and Justin who tell the listener the facts of a crime in a conversational manner. This is another podcast where a great deal of research is put into each episode.

True Crime Historian covers crimes from the past, and the listener not only learns about the crime but also learns a little history in the process.

Casefile True Crime is an addiction with its stellar narration and sleek production. You won’t be able to stop listening.

In the realm of “Mystery,” I highly recommend the podcast Lore. Lore looks at the creepy scary folklore legends of history to determine if there is any truth to these tales we first heard while sitting around the campfire. As the Lore website says, “Because sometimes the truth is more frightening than fiction.”

There are many more, great true crime and mystery podcasts out there, and once you hear one, you will want to hear them all. Try out the ones I’ve suggested, and while you’re at it, I hope you will give my podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier a listen.



Robin Barefield is the author of three Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter. To download a free copy of one of her novels, watch her webinar about how she became an author and why she writes Alaska wilderness mysteries. Also, sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska.

Mystery Newsletter

Sign Up for my free, monthly Mystery Newsletter about true crime in Alaska.

Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier

I am excited this week to announce my new podcast: Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier. As many of you know, I have been writing a mystery newsletter for the past three years about murder and mysterious disappearances in Alaska. A few of my newsletter subscribers encouraged me to start a podcast, and while I initially laughed at the idea, the seed took root and began to grow no matter how hard I tried to stomp on it.

At first, I didn’t believe I could upload a podcast with our slow satellite internet, but once I learned I could upload from the middle of the wilderness, I began to research what was involved in producing a podcast. Would it be expensive? Was the technology learning-curve too steep, and were my vocal skills up to the challenge?

I read everything I could find about starting a podcast, I listened to podcasts about podcasting, and I joined podcast support groups where I could ask questions. I spent less than $200 on a microphone and other necessary gear, bought audio editing software for another $100, and I signed up for a site to host my podcast.

Everything I am learning from this venture is new and challenging, and I love it all so far. I carefully chose a good microphone and headset and bought reasonably priced audio editing software that has proven to be easy to use. I also like the Hindenburg Journalist software because if I decide to take my editing to the next level, I can easily upgrade to a pro version. I chose Blubrry.com to host my podcast, mainly because it offers a free website for my podcast and all the tools I needed to learn how to publish the podcast and upload it to Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, and other platforms.

Do I know what I am doing yet as a podcaster? Nope, not even close, but I am trying not to be hard on myself. My podcast is far from perfect, but I have plenty of room to grow and improve.

The big question is, why do I want to spend money and countless hours I don’t have to tackle yet another project? The answer to this question is simple. I hope to introduce myself and my writing to more people. If they like my podcast, perhaps they will want to sign up for my newsletter and read my books. Podcasting is an experiment for me, and I will try it for several months. If I find my podcast requires too much time with too few payoffs, I will quietly back away from the microphone and return to what works.

The downside to starting a podcast is time. As you know, there are only so many hours in the day, and I do have a hectic regular job. If I want to podcast, something must give, and unfortunately, for now, I have decided to cut back on my blog posts. Right now, I write one post a week, so for the next few weeks, I plan to scale back to two posts a month, and I will alternate weekly between a podcast and a post. Once I streamline my podcast editing, perhaps I will have time to return to a weekly post schedule.

I’ve published my first podcast episode, and you can find it here. I’m working on my second episode, and it will be available in a few days. If you enjoy my podcast, please go to Apple Podcasts and leave a comment so that other listeners can find me. If you would like to listen to all my podcast episodes, don’t forget to subscribe.

Please let me know what you think of my podcast.  A few of my blog readers have been with me since I started this blog, and I appreciate you and value your opinions! Thank you for your support!


Robin Barefield is the author of three Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter. To download a free copy of one of her novels, watch her webinar about how she became an author and why she writes Alaska wilderness mysteries. Also, sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska, and sign up for her podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.

Mystery Newsletter

Sign Up for my free, monthly Mystery Newsletter about true crime in Alaska.