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Research Programs [Birds] |
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| Seabirds | Landbirds | Shorebirds | Waterfowl | Banding & Telemetry Program | Loons |
Seabirds Populations
of seabirds in Alaska are larger and more diverse than in any similar
region of the northern hemisphere. Alaska's extensive estuaries and
offshore waters provide breeding, feeding, and migrating habitats for
upwards of 100 million seabirds of 66 species. Breeding birds number about
50 million individuals of 38 species--96 percent of all the breeding
seabirds in the continental United States. The catalog of known breeding
sites includes more than 1,300 colonies ranging in size from a few birds
to more than 2.5 million. Important threats to Alaska's seabirds include
oil pollution, the introduction of predators to nesting islands, conflicts
with commercial fisheries, and disturbance or habitat loss associated with
human population growth in coastal areas. Experience shows that seabirds
can serve as sensitive indicators of local and large-scale changes in
their marine environment. Seabird research at the Alaska Science Center -
Biological Science Office encompasses the population dynamics, breeding biology, and
feeding ecology of a variety of species such as kittiwakes, murres,
puffins, auklets, petrels, cormorants, and gulls. The aim is to understand
and provide for the conservation needs of the birds themselves, and also
to support informed management policies for the marine system as a whole. |
Landbirds
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Shorebirds Ninety
percent of the migratory species (n = 53) in the Western Hemisphere have
breeding populations in Alaska; 37 of these, plus three additional races,
regularly breed there. The North Pacific, including Alaska and the
Russian Far East, host fully one-third of the world's shorebird
fauna. For almost all of the shorebirds occurring in Alaska, coastal
habitats are critical during some phase of their annual cycle,
particularly during the nonbreeding period. Many coastal areas are being
altered at an alarming rate, not only in East Asia where broad-scale
reclamation of intertidal habitats persists, but also in the Western
Hemisphere where the problem is much more localized, but nevertheless
ongoing. Effective conservation of any natural resource requires an
understanding of population dynamics and habitat requirements. For
many arctic breeding shorebirds such parameters as population size, annual
productivity, rates of adult and juvenile mortality, feeding habits, and
migration strategies, including habitat dependence and timing and routes
of migration, are largely unknown. The overriding focus of this program
has been to fill in these information needs for as many taxa as possible
in order that as many species as possible can be included in a
comprehensive monitoring effort.
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| Waterfowl
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| Banding
and Telemetry Program Each year, biologists with the Alaska Science Center - Biological Science Office mark nearly 3,000 birds of 50 different species with uniquely-coded metal or plastic leg bands, neck collars, or radio transmitters. These markers provide valuable data for studies such as: mark-recapture analysis to determine annual survival of breeding and wintering birds, breeding behavior and reproductive success, timing and routes of migration, and location of wintering and breeding areas. Data from this marking program enables biologists at the Center to address the various study objectives outlined on this page.
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Loons Numbers
of Red-throated Loons (Gavia stellata) breeding in Alaska declined
by 53% from 1977 to 1993. Four information needs listed by the USFWS
include data on demographic parameters, distribution among wintering areas
and their links to breeding areas, subsistence by-catch in fishing nets,
and exposure to contaminants. Our objectives are to (1) describe migration
routes and provide links between loons from two breeding areas and their
wintering areas using satellite telemetry, (2) measure heavy metal and
organochlorine levels in the blood of loons from two breeding areas and in
any addled eggs we discover, (3) estimate clutch size, hatching success,
and chick-rearing success of loons and compare these values to that
observed in other populations, and (4) begin discussions with USFWS
personnel to develop means of surveying local people about their knowledge
of by-catch in fishing nets.
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Last Updated: Tuesday, September 17, 2002