What One Magnificent Predator Can Show Us About the Arctic’s Future

Scientists are scaling the cliffs of Alaska's Seward Peninsula to stop the mighty Gyrfalcon from losing more ground to climate change.

There was a slight complication the first time Bryce Robinson rappelled from the lip of a Seward Peninsula tundra cliff onto a ledge occupied by a family of Gyrfalcons. Robinson, a 29-year-old graduate student at Boise State University, sported a magnificent beard that reached to the second button of his flannel shirt. It was dense, Claus-like, brown as burnt umber, and as Robinson eased down from the cliff it got caught in the belay device that held the young scientist fast to his climbing rope. Dangling above a broad tundra river, Robinson watched in horror as a fist-sized wad of dark hair jammed in the climbing apparatus like weeds in a string trimmer. He couldn鈥檛 go up, he couldn鈥檛 go down. His only option made him weep inside. 鈥淭hat beard was my identity,鈥 he recalls. Robinson pulled a knife out of his pocket and sheared the beard between rope and chin, and then watched as a softball-sized chunk of his persona was swept away by the wind like a brown Chia Pet pushed off the cliff edge.

Robinson has logged some serious cliff time since then, and I am thankful for that, because I鈥檓 dangling on a rope beside him, bundled up in a heavy down jacket despite the fact that it is June. Forty feet below our boots, another Arctic river strings through gravel, cobble, and knife-edged boulders. These are not ideal conditions for a cliff rappel, not ever, and especially not when you鈥檙e 90 miles of Alaskan dirt road from the nearest emergency room. The cliff face, rotted and cracked by the Arctic鈥檚 endless cycles of freezing and thawing, crumbles under our feet. Our ropes are strung over fractured rock so sharp that we have to pad it with our jackets to protect the ropes from being cut. Plus there are no trees, no boulders to serve as anchors. Instead the ropes are clipped to a trio of rebar rods pounded into the permafrost.

When we make it to the nest, 20 feet down the cliff, old bones glint in the Arctic twilight. There鈥檚 the breast keel of a Willow Ptarmigan, the humerus of a Long-tailed Jaeger, a carpometacarpus of some unidentified curlew. Three raptor nestlings huddle in a corner of the rock ledge, beaks agape, white downy breasts streaked with blood from their most recent meal. Robinson moves closer, cooing to the young birds as he readies his gear: banding pliers, leg bands, syringes, a digital scale, batteries, and a fresh memory card for the motion-activated camera he had bolted to the ledge weeks earlier. 鈥淚t鈥檚 okay, everybody. This won鈥檛 take long,鈥 he chatters. 鈥淥h, nice ground squirrel tail. Good eats, guys.鈥

Just then one of the chicks projectile poops, shooting out a chalky, putrid stream of crap that is impressive in both volume and velocity. Later I learn that this is a common hazard for cliff-dangling raptor banders, but at the moment I鈥檓 completely taken aback. The chick鈥檚 aim is spot-on, catching Robinson squarely in the chest. I can smell the stew of semi-digested jaeger and ptarmigan from five feet away. On a cliff ledge below us, Ellen Whittle, the wildlife tech for the research project, stifles a smirk, but I bust out laughing like a 12-year-old.

鈥淭hanks for that,鈥 Robinson grimaces. I tell myself he鈥檚 talking to the bird.

Such are the peculiarities of doing research in one of the world鈥檚 most extreme environments, on a bird that would just as soon defecate in your face as look at you. The Gyrfalcon is the largest falcon species on Earth, with a four-foot wingspan similar in size to that of a big buteo, like the Red-tailed Hawk. In the air, Gyrfalcons are a predatorial mash-up of Muhammad Ali and Floyd Mayweather, speedy and large enough to kill a fleeing Pin-tailed Duck in midair but agile enough to snatch a Lapland Longspur off a tundra tussock.

The top avian predator of the tundra, they are handsome birds as well, typically gray and barred, although lighter-plumaged individuals can range to nearly pure white. Their demeanor and bearing have long made the species a favorite of falconers, so revered in the Middle Ages that only a king could hunt with a Gyr.

鈥淭hey are badass birds,鈥 John Earthman tells me one morning as we load an ATV trailer pod with camping gear. A born-and-bred Texan and now district attorney of Nome, Earthman volunteers with the Seward Peninsula鈥檚 various raptor projects. He is part banding assistant, part ATV mechanic, and a jack-of all-trades.

He also hunts with a 16-year-old Gyrfalcon named Tinsel. 鈥淭hese birds recognize opportunity and take advantage of whatever is going on around them,鈥 he says. Earthman has seen Gyrfalcons track pickup trucks and Arctic foxes to watch for flushed prey. 鈥淭he birds take nothing for granted,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven when they eat, they keep an eye on the sky.鈥

As tough as these birds may be, however, they survive at the delicate nexus between the frozen and the unfrozen world. Gyrfalcons range across the entire Arctic, covering North America, Europe, northern Russia, Greenland, and Iceland, and the species鈥 future is clouded by climate change and a shifting Arctic landscape. Warming temperatures threaten to mix up the timing of prey availability for the raptors, potentially making it harder for the birds to successfully reproduce. As Arctic seas open, shore-based freight facilities could imperil remote habitats, while an increase in high-latitude mining is already bringing more roads and people into the Gyrfalcon鈥檚 orbit.

To learn how a changing Arctic might affect the nesting success of Gyrfalcons on the Seward Peninsula, Robinson is taking a close look at how the adult birds depend on different prey at various stages of the nesting season, from when they breed to when their grown chicks fledge. He has a critical question: Is a bird that has mastered some of the most challenging conditions on Earth resilient enough to weather a warming Arctic? While current populations are largely stable, many researchers fear a slide toward endangered status.

These issues make the Gyrfalcon 鈥渢he polar bear of the avian world,鈥 says David Anderson, director of . 鈥淚t is the top avian predator of this ecosystem, and when you see changes in the populations of the top predator, it鈥檚 a reflection of what鈥檚 going on at all the lower levels of the system.鈥

The realm of the Gyrfalcon was once a vast, frozen no-man鈥檚-land cordoned off by a polar ice cap and unfathomable distance. No longer. Today half the world wants a piece of a fast-thawing Arctic.

The region holds an estimated one-fifth to one-quarter of the world鈥檚 remaining untapped oil and gas stores. The rate of warming in the Arctic, , could open new shipping lanes鈥攚hat some call 鈥溾濃攁cross the North Pole, which would change how countries circumnavigate and spur a new-age land grab. Russia, for one, recently announced its intention to build 13 airfields, an air-to-ground firing range, and 10 radar stations as . All eight Arctic nations鈥擟anada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and the United States鈥攁re positioning themselves to push their flags deeply into the disappearing ice cap, but they鈥檙e not the only ones making moves on the not-so-frozen north. No surprise, China has already sent one commercial cargo vessel , and plans to build its second polar icebreaker next year.

My odyssey to the land of the Gyrfalcon came off in a far less imperial fashion, to say the least. Over the course of five days we rappelled, hiked, and climbed into three Gyrfalcon nests, not one of which was easy to reach. Just to get to the cliff nest where Robinson took that fecal flash-bomb to the chest required eight hours of travel. From Nome we drove the entire 86-mile length of the Kougarok Road in 4WD pickups, hauling six-wheeled ATVs past musk oxen grazing in backyards on the edge of town. Past herds of reindeer looking like startled goats, past weird earth-covered ice formations called pingos. When the dirt road petered out at the bridge over the Kougarok River, Robinson, Whittle, and Earthman took the six-wheelers ahead, while Anderson and I hoofed it through another couple of miles of quagmire. We pitched our tents at an abandoned mining camp, scarfed down a quick dinner, then struck out on another mile-long hike and a barefoot stream crossing. By the time we set the ropes, it was already midnight. And as bright as noon.

This is the prime time of year for banding Gyrfalcons. The chicks are large enough to handle safely but still several weeks from being able to fly from the nest. While it鈥檚 most common for birds to hatch when their food is most plentiful, Gyrfalcons breed earlier than other raptors. This ensures that the greatest food abundance鈥攜oung, na茂ve ptarmigan鈥攃oincides with the fledging of juvenile hunters just learning to kill. At the end of summer, when the majority of other bird species migrate south, most Gyrfalcons stay in the northern latitudes. The birds鈥 large size helps prevent heat loss, while their partially feathered legs and the ability to store more than a half-pound of fat under the skin鈥攁nd another half-pound of food in the crop鈥攈elp keep the cold at bay. They spend the winter feeding on seabirds and resting on icebergs in the open ocean.

These eccentricities make them particularly vulnerable to climate change, which could uncouple the timing of their breeding cycle and food availability. Even if the timing is right, global warming could alter the tundra in other ways that might make gyr chicks vulnerable to starvation. Most ecologists believe that warmer temperatures have led to an increase in the range and size of tundra shrubs, such as alder, willow, and birch, and you can see the difference in detailed photographs taken by the U.S. Navy in 1948 to 1950 placed side by side with photos from 1999 to 2000. In some places, the shrubby landscape doubled in just those 50 years. 鈥淭here has been a tremendous increase in shrub cover in much of the Alaska North Slope, the Mackenzie River in Canada, and many other studied tundra regions,鈥 according to Gaius Shaver, principal investigator at the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory鈥檚 Arctic Long Term Ecological Research Site. 鈥淎nd given continued climate change, you might wonder why it isn鈥檛 happening even faster.鈥

John Earthman lives on 18 acres of willow-choked tundra just outside the Nome city limits, and has photographs of the spread from the 1970s. 鈥淚t was plain tundra out here,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here were very few shrubs of any kind.鈥 This of the Arctic tundra poses serious threats to Gyrfalcons because their prey鈥攑tarmigan, primarily, but also hares and ground squirrels鈥攃an take advantage of the extra cover, making it harder for the raptors to find them.

In a warmer climate, there鈥檚 also the threat of more competition and bullying from Peregrine Falcons, which, though smaller, are more aggressive. The Gyrfalcons display a great affinity for certain nesting sites鈥攖hey鈥檝e occupied , according to scientists鈥攂ut persistent Peregrines will push them out.

鈥淵ou spend much time up here and it is evident that climate change is not a future prediction,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淚t is happening right now, and it鈥檚 building speed.鈥 Anderson remembers walking down Nome鈥檚 bar-lined main drag last summer and stopping to chat with a local Eskimo man. Suddenly the fellow pointed to a nearby storefront鈥攁 grasshopper was clinging to the door frame. 鈥淗e told me that he鈥檇 lived all his life in Nome and he鈥檇 never seen a grasshopper before.鈥

If tundra cliff rappelling is the sexy side of Robinson鈥檚 research, not so much the days upon days of data crunching. Thankfully my visit comes before he fires up the spreadsheets and algorithms.

But I do get a taste of his massive falcon family slideshow. Thanks to unbelievable access to tundra river country and 4,000-foot-tall craggy mountains made possible by old gravel mining roads that push up to 90 miles across the Seward Peninsula, Robinson has created the largest camera study of Gyrfalcon nests ever. To put this in perspective, a few other nest-monitoring studies have been keeping tabs on two or three mating pairs per season. Robinson installed cameras in 13 occupied nests in 2015 alone. It鈥檚 an embarrassment of riches: So far he鈥檚 analyzed more than 750,000 photographs鈥攐ne at a time. 

Back at his crowded rental apartment in Nome, big windows overlook gravel yards packed with snowmobiles, outboard motors, rusted hulks of 鈥80s-era pickup trucks, and stacks of dog kennels鈥攏o surprise, since Nome is the finish line of the famed Iditarod race. Robinson inserts a memory card into his MacBook and cues up a fantastic photo of a female Gyrfalcon on a high ledge, a tundra valley spooling to infinity below. The bird is brooding a trio of chicks in a spare stick nest tangled with the feathers of curlew and jaeger. 鈥淟ook. Right here you can see her turn her head towards the sky,鈥 Robinson says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 watching the male.鈥

He clicks through a few more frames.

鈥淣ow she gets up to leave鈥濃click, click鈥斺渁nd he immediately comes in with prey in his talons. Then he feeds the chicks and hangs out with the babies. What鈥檚 interesting about the Gyrfalcons is how much variability we see from one pair to the next. Some males have nothing to do with the young birds. Others will actually sit on the nest and brood the chicks.鈥

Robinson peers more closely at the laptop screen, stroking his beard, which has regrown since that traumatic shearing on the ropes. As part of his study, he tried to identify every prey item brought to each and every nest. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a foot, a foot, a foot, and another foot,鈥 he murmurs, still clicking through the slideshow, then pausing. 鈥淲ith that fur pattern, it could only be a Greenland [northern] collared lemming. You don鈥檛 see that very often because these birds are really optimized for taking avian prey.鈥

Which might be the point of it all: If I ate pizza six nights a week and then the only Italian restaurant closed, I鈥檇 switch to burritos in a snap. The question is, what about Gyrfalcons? Could the birds shift from ptarmigan to ground squirrel? Could they hunt successfully in dense alder thickets? Are they malleable enough to survive climate change? As a specialist and a top predator, Gyrfalcons will be indicators of things to come, so we鈥檇 do well to pay attention. 鈥淲hen stuff goes south for the Gyrfalcon,鈥 Anderson says, grimly, 鈥渢he farmer in Idaho better start watching his water allotment. The guy in Texas better keep a closer eye on his beach house. This bird is the harbinger of what is to come.鈥

We luck out on my last day in Alaska: The skies are clear enough for a safe helicopter flight. To keep tabs on Gyrfalcon nests too far removed to visit by foot, pack raft, or ATV, Robinson turns to a chopper, but only when the weather is just right. Taking off, we climb east to flee the Bering Sea fog bank, and then cruise the tundra at 200 feet high and 105 miles per hour. Below, rivers braid through broad valleys. I can see streams of salmon edging through gin-clear pools and caribou trails like snail tracks in a sandbar. A moose ignores the helicopter鈥檚 droning, but a grizzly sow and two cubs beat a retreat into the tundra alders. Robinson鈥檚 voice crackles in the headset. 鈥淎 Gyrfalcon鈥檚-eye view,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 beat it.鈥

At $950 an hour for the chopper and pilot, though, there鈥檚 little time for rubbernecking. Robinson has the coordinates of his target nests logged into a GPS, though as we near the sites, it鈥檚 pretty easy to pick out the ledges where gyrs are. A Gyrfalcon nesting cliff is part compost pile, part rubbish heap, part toilet, and part graffiti wall for the lichens, fed by the nitrogenous whitewash, that paint the rock ledge orange. We can spot the lichen colonies from miles away. Below the nests, rotting ptarmigan pieces and parts fertilize the thin, meager soils. And voil脿! Lush green grasses sprout thigh-high, attracting another micro-community of rodents and breeding songbirds such as Say鈥檚 Phoebes, which benefit from the gyrs鈥 tendency to aggressively protect their own nests.

We slalom from mountain range to river canyon, Robinson calling out nest status and chick numbers while Whittle confirms the sightings and tallies the birds on a data sheet. The flight is a birder鈥檚 Arctic dream: I see Cackling Geese on their cliff-face nests and Canvasback ducks on tundra ponds. Robinson points out a pair of Bristle-thighed Curlews flapping in the airspace below. These nest in only a few places in Alaska; it鈥檚 likely that fewer than 10,000 remain on the planet. It鈥檚 one of the most sought-after bird sightings in this part of Alaska. 鈥淥h, man, David is gonna be pissed,鈥 Robinson says. 鈥淗e鈥檚 tried to spot one of those for three years straight.鈥

Then, suddenly, Robinson sounds an alarm. 鈥淕yr in the air,鈥 he says, jabbing a finger toward a looming cliff wall so tall it casts a shadow inside the helicopter. He鈥檇 warned the pilot earlier that the birds seem to have little fear of aircraft; he鈥檚 seen Gyrfalcons charge a helicopter in flight. Now he鈥檚 on the edge of his seat, twisting to keep his eyes on a bird that only he can see. 鈥淟et鈥檚 get out of here,鈥 he says.

The pilot banks the chopper, and I press my face to the bubble of glass, searching for the raptor. I never find it, but I do see its shadow as it races down the cliff face a hundred yards away, then streaks out over the Arctic tundra, where change is coming with a swiftness and sureness the bird cannot comprehend.