Alaska's coastal and offshore waters provide foraging habitat for an estimated 100 million birds comprising more than 90 different species; from loons and seaducks that nest inland, to petrels and puffins that breed on islands off shore. All these birds depend on the sea to provide a wide variety of food types— from clams, crabs and urchins nearshore— to krill, forage fish, and squid offshore. The availability of nesting habitat and suitable prey are important natural factors that regulate the distribution and abundance of marine birds. But seabird populations are also affected by human activities that have direct impacts (pollution, bycatch in fishing gear) and indirect effects (global warming alters food availability) on birds.
Return to Ecosystems >> Marine Ecosystems
The Department of Interior (DOI) is mandated by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Endangered Species Act to conserve and protect all seabirds in U.S. waters up to 200 miles offshore.
Additionally, the DOI is mandated to manage subsistence resources, including birds, under the Federal Subsistence Management Program.
The DOI, through the NPS, has shared responsibility for Humpback Whales and other marine mammals mandated by the Marine Mammal Protection Act (1972) and the Endangered Species Act (1973), and specific regulatory and conservation authority within Alaska's Glacier Bay National Park and Monument, one of a few marine sanctuaries managed by DOI.
Within DOI, the USGS has a responsibility to assist those DOI agencies with marine jurisdictions (NPS, USFWS, BOEM) by gathering and interpreting data on seabirds and other marine waterfowl, humpback whales and other marine mammals, and relevant components of their marine environments (such as forage fish, zooplankton, oceanography, toxins, etc.) that influence the status and trends of these protected marine animals.
Seabirds also serve as practical indicators of change in the marine environment— natural or human induced— because they can be readily monitored at colonies and at sea. For all these reasons, marine bird research is a vital part of the DOI mission in Alaska and the North Pacific.
We study population biology and feeding ecology of a variety of seabird species, including threatened and endangered species. We use a multidisciplinary approach that incorporates study of marine habitats and food webs so that we can better understand why seabird populations fluctuate over time. This website highlights some of the research conducted by the Seabird, Forage Fish and Marine Ecology Project at the Alaska Science Center.
Tidewater Glacier Influence on Marine Ecosystems
Cook Inlet Seabird and Forage Fish Study
Detecting Long-term Changes in Forage Fish Populations in Prince William Sound, Alaska
Harmful algal bloom toxins in Alaska seabirds
North Pacific Pelagic Seabird Database
Pacific Marine Heatwave
Seabird Die-offs in Alaska
USGS Research Vessel Alaskan Gyre
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Below are the publications associated with this project.
Modeled distribution and abundance of a pelagic seabird reveal trends in relation to fisheries Modeled distribution and abundance of a pelagic seabird reveal trends in relation to fisheries
Kittiwake diets and chick production signal a 2008 regime shift in the Northeast Pacific Kittiwake diets and chick production signal a 2008 regime shift in the Northeast Pacific
Effects of currents and tides on fine-scale use of marine bird habitats in a Southeast Alaska hotspot Effects of currents and tides on fine-scale use of marine bird habitats in a Southeast Alaska hotspot
Structure of marine predator and prey communities along environmental gradients in a glaciated fjord Structure of marine predator and prey communities along environmental gradients in a glaciated fjord
Oceanographic gradients and seabird prey community dynamics in glacial fjords Oceanographic gradients and seabird prey community dynamics in glacial fjords
Global seabird responses to forage fish depletion - One-third for the birds Global seabird responses to forage fish depletion - One-third for the birds
Below are news items associated with this research.
Alaska's coastal and offshore waters provide foraging habitat for an estimated 100 million birds comprising more than 90 different species; from loons and seaducks that nest inland, to petrels and puffins that breed on islands off shore. All these birds depend on the sea to provide a wide variety of food types— from clams, crabs and urchins nearshore— to krill, forage fish, and squid offshore. The availability of nesting habitat and suitable prey are important natural factors that regulate the distribution and abundance of marine birds. But seabird populations are also affected by human activities that have direct impacts (pollution, bycatch in fishing gear) and indirect effects (global warming alters food availability) on birds.
Return to Ecosystems >> Marine Ecosystems
The Department of Interior (DOI) is mandated by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Endangered Species Act to conserve and protect all seabirds in U.S. waters up to 200 miles offshore.
Additionally, the DOI is mandated to manage subsistence resources, including birds, under the Federal Subsistence Management Program.
The DOI, through the NPS, has shared responsibility for Humpback Whales and other marine mammals mandated by the Marine Mammal Protection Act (1972) and the Endangered Species Act (1973), and specific regulatory and conservation authority within Alaska's Glacier Bay National Park and Monument, one of a few marine sanctuaries managed by DOI.
Within DOI, the USGS has a responsibility to assist those DOI agencies with marine jurisdictions (NPS, USFWS, BOEM) by gathering and interpreting data on seabirds and other marine waterfowl, humpback whales and other marine mammals, and relevant components of their marine environments (such as forage fish, zooplankton, oceanography, toxins, etc.) that influence the status and trends of these protected marine animals.
Seabirds also serve as practical indicators of change in the marine environment— natural or human induced— because they can be readily monitored at colonies and at sea. For all these reasons, marine bird research is a vital part of the DOI mission in Alaska and the North Pacific.
We study population biology and feeding ecology of a variety of seabird species, including threatened and endangered species. We use a multidisciplinary approach that incorporates study of marine habitats and food webs so that we can better understand why seabird populations fluctuate over time. This website highlights some of the research conducted by the Seabird, Forage Fish and Marine Ecology Project at the Alaska Science Center.
Tidewater Glacier Influence on Marine Ecosystems
Cook Inlet Seabird and Forage Fish Study
Detecting Long-term Changes in Forage Fish Populations in Prince William Sound, Alaska
Harmful algal bloom toxins in Alaska seabirds
North Pacific Pelagic Seabird Database
Pacific Marine Heatwave
Seabird Die-offs in Alaska
USGS Research Vessel Alaskan Gyre
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Below are the publications associated with this project.
Modeled distribution and abundance of a pelagic seabird reveal trends in relation to fisheries Modeled distribution and abundance of a pelagic seabird reveal trends in relation to fisheries
Kittiwake diets and chick production signal a 2008 regime shift in the Northeast Pacific Kittiwake diets and chick production signal a 2008 regime shift in the Northeast Pacific
Effects of currents and tides on fine-scale use of marine bird habitats in a Southeast Alaska hotspot Effects of currents and tides on fine-scale use of marine bird habitats in a Southeast Alaska hotspot
Structure of marine predator and prey communities along environmental gradients in a glaciated fjord Structure of marine predator and prey communities along environmental gradients in a glaciated fjord
Oceanographic gradients and seabird prey community dynamics in glacial fjords Oceanographic gradients and seabird prey community dynamics in glacial fjords
Global seabird responses to forage fish depletion - One-third for the birds Global seabird responses to forage fish depletion - One-third for the birds
Below are news items associated with this research.