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One of the warmest Decembers on record in Minnesota will leave its mark on the landscape

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The hottest year worldwide ever recorded — 2023 — is set to end warm, brown and dry in Minnesota. The state was spared the scorching heatwave that languished over much of the country all summer. But the warm front now blanketing Minnesota will leave its mark on our winter-adapted ecosystem.

Without a deep snowpack, deer likely will flourish. It will cause havoc for moose, however, and likely lead to more summertime algal blooms on lakes.

Spurred by a combination of global climate change and a strong El Nino, this December has a chance to end as the warmest in much of the state since tracking began in 1872, according to the state climatology office.

The average temperature has been about 9 degrees above normal in the Twin Cities and between 7 and 12 degrees hotter in Duluth, International Falls, Rochester and St. Cloud, said Kenny Blumenfeld, a climatologist for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ climatology office.

If the forecasts for even warmer, drier weather over the next week prove true, records will fall, he said.

Minnesota’s mildest winters have almost all been during strong El Nino weather patterns. That’s when a stretch of the Pacific Ocean about the size of the Midwest along the equator is hotter than normal. The energy from that heat drives a pattern that often, but not always, traps cold air about 1,000 miles north of Minnesota and pushes moisture about 1,000 miles south, Blumenfeld said.

“So we have this long-term trend toward warmer conditions caused by climate change and then this winter we have this huge spike in temperatures from a natural weather pattern,” he said. “There’s strong evidence that both pieces are at play here.”

The brunt of climate change has hit Minnesota in the winter, and the increasingly short window for snow and ice has affected the state’s wildlife, lakes and forests. Warm and dry weather means different things for different species and natural systems. Here’s how a few of them will likely fare.

Moose

Warm winters have been brutal for moose. They have been under attack for years from a fatal brain parasite that has been creeping north and from winter ticks — a native species whose population explodes when there is no snow.

About 30% of moose in Minnesota died last year, with a winter tick infestation being a major cause, said Seth Moore, the director of biology and environment for the Grand Portage Band of Chippewa.

While the start to the winter hasn’t been great for moose, the most important time for them will be in the late winter and early spring. Ticks live on the moose all winter, then fall off around April to lay eggs in the soil. If there is still snow on the ground when they drop, the vast majority of those ticks will drown. Their eggs won’t hatch and only a small number will survive to bother moose in the coming year. But if the snow is gone by April and the ground is dry, as it increasingly has been, the ticks will flourish, Moore said.

They link up by the thousands and bury themselves in the moose’s skin, where they engorge for the rest of the year. Infected females lose so much blood they may not have the energy to give birth or their calves may be too anemic to survive, scientists have found. Adult moose can become lethargic and more prone to predators or susceptible to disease.

Whitetail deer

Whitetail deer tend to thrive during warm and dry winters, said Tom Gable, lead scientist of the Voyageurs Wolf Project.

And the past two winters with deep snow in northern Minnesota have been tough on deer.

“We had snow up here that lasted into early May,” he said. “That’s when they’re already zapped nutritionally from the winter, so if they don’t have bare ground and they have to trudge through deep snow it can make them vulnerable.”

Gable and his team of researchers trek dozens of miles through the woods every day during the spring and summer to record and study what wolves eat. Last spring, they came upon deer bones that had zero fat in the marrow, a strong sign that those deer had burned through fat reserves and were struggling for energy.

The natural world is far too complex to simply predict that a mild winter will cause the deer population to increase, Gable said. But it certainly won’t hurt them.

Wolves

The inverse likely is true for wolves. Wolves struggle all summer to find prey, Gable said, when deer and moose are at their strongest and fastest. Deep snow slows deer down. Without it, wolves will have a more difficult time finding a meal this winter, he said.

But wolves are tough and adaptable. While they often are thought of as an archetypal northern species, they are as at home in a Mexican desert or a North Carolina swamp as they are in Minnesota’s North Woods. Anything that is good for deer, will eventually be good for wolves, too.

Studies have shown for years that wolf populations rise and fall with that of their prey. If a few warm winters in a row cause the deer population to flourish, wolf numbers likely won’t be far behind.

Lakes

Lakes across the state are freezing later and thawing earlier. And with temperatures struggling to stay below freezing even at night, this winter may be one of the more extreme cases in recent years. Minnesota and Wisconsin have been tracking ice coverage for more than a century, and the region is losing about four days of ice every 10 years, records show.

Some in southern Minnesota and central Wisconsin tend to remain open water about a month longer than they did in the late 1800s.

Those extra weeks of open water and sunlight are rapidly changing the life in the lakes. As more light penetrates a lake, more algae grows in the summer and eventually dies off, sucking away oxygen and forcing fish into a smaller and smaller livable space.

The effect is most clearly seen in the state’s cisco population. Cisco are small white fish that live in cold, deep waters. They’re an essential food source for walleye, lake trout, muskie and other predator fish. Loons have even learned to gather by the hundreds on cisco lakes, where they consume the oily fish to pack on energy before they migrate each fall, according to a study from the U.S. Geological Survey and Minnesota DNR.

With less ice coverage, cisco have disappeared from more than a dozen Minnesota lakes and have lost more than half their total population in the past 30 years, according to the DNR. As they die off, the entire food chain is disrupted.



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Minneapolis city council questions $1M contract for sister of staffer

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The fledgling Minneapolis “safety-beyond-policing” department, which has been accused of mismanaging contracts with violence interrupters, is again under scrutiny for requesting nearly $1 million for a business owned by the sister of one of its staff members.

Unanswered questions about the Black Business Enterprises Fund and the purpose of the contract have repeatedly delayed a City Council vote on the contract.

Neighborhood Safety Director Luana Nelson-Brown came before the council’s administration oversight committee on Oct. 7 to argue for giving the business a one-year, $992,400 contract for “capacity building and compliance consulting services.” Black Business Enterprises Fund would use the money to employ a team of 17 experts to coach violence interrupters on financial literacy and how to comply with government accounting requirements.

“A good financial system allows organizations to track their spending accurately, ensuring that funds are used properly and enabling them to prepare regular reports that meet government expectations,” Nelson-Brown said. “It also streamlines invoice reimbursements, which allows us to make more timely payments, and it is necessary for audits and evaluation of program success. I also want to note that these are all things that have been identified as weaknesses.”

Nelson-Brown said the need for the contract is underscored by a lawsuit that accused the city of arbitrarily awarding millions of dollars to violence prevention groups without proper accounting, as well as the “Safe and Thriving Communities” report on building a comprehensive model of public safety. The city commissioned the Harvard University report after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.

City Council members have also been pushing for greater accountability in the Neighborhood Safety Department, particularly after a whistleblower complaint shared with council members this year questioned the relationships between contract recipients and department staff. One of the whistleblower’s claims had to do with Black Business Enterprises Fund owner Nancy Korsah, and her sister, Neighborhood Safety Department staffer Georgia Korsah.

On Oct. 7, council members asked Nelson-Brown about that relationship, whether the business had experience working with nonprofits — particularly those that provide violence prevention services — and whether it is an organization capable of helping others build theirs.

Council Member LaTrisha Vetaw said she wasn’t aware of what the Black Business Enterprises Fund had done besides “having a gala.” Council Member Jeremiah Ellison said a review of the organization’s website raised a “red flag.”



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Motorcyclist hits fish house, dies in 3-vehicle crash on Minnesota hwy.

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A motorcyclist set off a three-vehicle crash on a central Minnesota highway and was killed, officials said Monday.

The wreck occurred about 10:40 p.m. Sunday north of Royalton on Hwy. 10, the State Patrol said.

The motorcyclist was heading east on Hwy. 10 and struck a fish house being pulled by a pickup truck driver. The motorcyclist, a 27-year-old man from Sauk Rapids, Minn., was thrown from his bike and struck a median pillar.

A car heading in the same direction hit the motorcycle.

Occupying the pickup were a 46-year-old driver from Rice, Minn., and a 43-year-old passenger, also from Rice. The car’s driver, a 34-year-old woman from Cobalt, was her vehicle’s only occupant.

Identities of all the people involved in the crash have yet to be released, and there is no word yet on whether anyone was injured other than the motorcyclist.



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Driver dies after hitting deer, then rear-ended by second driver in Maple Grove

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A motorist died Sunday morning after striking a deer on a northwest metro freeway and then getting rear-ended by a second driver, the State Patrol said.

Julie Terwey, 60, of South Haven, Minn., was driving east on Interstate 94 near Brockton Lane in Maple Grove when she struck a deer at about 5:25 a.m. She was stopped in the center lane when she was hit from behind by a second driver, the patrol said.

Terwey, who was wearing a seat belt, was pronounced dead at the scene, the patrol said.

The driver who collided with Terway’s Ford Escape, Jordan Land, was taken to a hospital with noncritical injuries, the patrol said.

Land, 32, of Becker, Minn., was wearing a seat belt, the patrol said.

Alcohol was not a factor in the predawn crash, the patrol said.



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