Paris, France | AFP | Muser NewsDesk

Like humans, wildlife is increasingly vulnerable as climate change fuels longer and more intense heatwaves, disrupting feeding and breeding, and in extreme cases proving fatal.

The human toll of heatwaves is well documented but their ecological impacts have received less attention.

A study published in March in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution found that three-quarters of land and ocean species assessed were “negatively impacted” during a major 2021 heatwave across western North America.

Heatwaves can be “brutal” on wildlife, said Gregoire Lois, an ornithologist at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, which is withering under its second heatwave of the year.

Animals have fewer opportunities to adapt during sudden heatwaves than under gradual warming, he told AFP.

Birds

Birds are particularly vulnerable to heat, with a body temperature of between 39 °C and 42 °C that rises further during flight or when foraging.

They also lack sweat glands, making it harder to dissipate heat when temperatures soar.

Instead, they cool down through evaporation via their respiratory tracts, a water-intensive mechanism that increases the risk of heat stress and dehydration.

Young birds, still in the nest and unable to fly during the summer heat, are particularly vulnerable.

“The young, suffocating from the heat, sometimes fall from the nest whilst searching for air,” said the League for the Protection of Birds, a French wildlife NGO.

Birds that nest under eaves — such as swifts and swallows — are most at risk, added.

Read also: Bird feathers found to release heat into space in first mid-infrared study

Mammals

Vertebrates regulate their body temperature through panting or sweating but that process “results in greater water loss the smaller the animal is”, said Lois.

Anne-Laure Dugue, from the league’s ‘fauna in distress’ programme, said the risk of hyperthermia or dehydration was particularly significant among hedgehogs and certain small rodents.

Image: a hedgehog walking through the grass (s . climate change, wildlife)
Credit: Sylvie Brindley | Unsplash

Mass bat die-offs have been recorded during heatwaves as animals become disoriented and dehydrated.

In January 2026, thousands of flying foxes perished during a heatwave in south-eastern Australia.

Large mammals are not spared either: for species adapted to the cold — such as bears, bison, reindeer and moose — their thick fur becomes a hindrance when temperatures rise.

Exposure to even a week of 27 °C daytime highs greatly increases the chance of koala illness or death, concluded a study of 20 years of observational data published in Biology Letters in May.

Other species like foxes can suffer burns to their paws when they come into contact with scalding surfaces such as tarmac or sand.

Invertebrates

Most invertebrates are ectothermic, meaning that their body temperature depends largely on their environment.

Lois said the consequences can be “severe” when their thermal tolerance limit is exceeded.

This is particularly true as their movement is often limited, and sometimes nonexistent. In 2021, during a widespread heatwave in the North Pacific, more than a billion mussels, clams and starfish perished.

Fish

In fish, high temperatures reduce the oxygen available in the water while increasing their physiological needs, which can lead to heat stress, disease, reproductive disruption and, in some cases, mass mortality.

During a heatwave across Europe in August 2018, a tonne of fish was found dead in the Rhine River across three Swiss cantons.

Read also: Cold-blooded animals struggle to cope with daily temperature variation

Amphibians and reptiles

Highly dependent on moisture, frogs, toads and newts suffer during heatwaves, particularly if their watery habitats are parched by drought.

Their permeable skin makes them highly susceptible to dehydration. During heatwaves, they lose water more easily and risk drying out if the humid conditions necessary for their survival are no longer present.

Their reproduction can also be severely affected, particularly when spawning grounds dry out prematurely.

Reptiles like lizards and snakes are not immune either.

They do not regulate their body temperature internally, so must severely restrict their activities during hot spells, threatening their ability to hunt for food.

“Sometimes, as an adaptation strategy, they will become nocturnal… The problem is that prey and food resources are not necessarily active at the same times,” said Lois.

dep-jmi/np/lt/pdw

© Agence France-Presse

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Delphine PAYSANT and Julien MIVIELLE | AFP
Featured image credit: Joshua J. Cotten | Unsplash

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