|

|

|
Restoring
Common Murre Colonies
|

|

|
Scientists
are working to restore Common Murre
colonies at several sites throughout the
Sanctuary. (©California Department of
Fish & Game)
|
Between
1980 and 1986 Common Murre colonies between Marin
and Monterey Counties declined drastically, due to
mortality in gillnets and oil spills and low
breeding success during the 1982-83 El Niño
—as much as 45.8 percent along the Big Sur coast
(Castle and Hurricane Point rocks). One major
impact was the extermination of murres at Devil's
Slide Rock (DSR) in San Mateo County following the
1986 Apex Houston oil spill. This spill killed
9,000 seabirds, including 6,000 Common Murres.
Settlement of a federal case against the
potentially responsible party established a Trustee
Council with representatives from the U. S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, NOAA, and California
Department of Fish and Game to oversee restoration
of natural resources injured by the spill.
Since 1996 the Council,
along with the San Francisco Bay National Wildlife
Refuge Complex, Humboldt State University
Foundation, National Audubon Society, and U.S.
Geological Survey, has been conducting a Common
Murre restoration project in central California.
The main goal is to restore exterminated murre
colonies using social attraction. Specifically,
biologists are using decoys, recorded murre calls,
and mirrors to attract murres to DSR and San Pedro
Rock (SPR), both in San Mateo County. Castle and
Hurricane Point rocks have been targeted for
potential restoration efforts, also. However,
limited information was available concerning murre
biology at these colonies, so intensive monitoring
is being conducted to evaluate the best restoration
options there.
In January 1996
restoration efforts began at DSR when nearly 400
decoys, 12 three-sided mirror boxes, and 2
independent sound systems were deployed. That year,
the colony had a peak count of 29 murres: 6 pairs
laid eggs and 3 chicks fledged. The colony has
continued to grow and even produced chicks during
the severe 1998 El Niño event. In 1999
numbers grew substantially—with a peak count of
137 murres, breeding numbers increased to 70 pairs,
and 59 chicks fledged.
In April 1998 social
attraction equipment was placed on SPR. A slower
response has been seen here, with a peak count of
26 murres landing during the past 2 years and no
documented breeding. Murres last bred on SPR in
1908, so we expect it will take longer to
recolonize this site compared to more recently
destroyed sites.
Restoration efforts along
the Big Sur coast present a different challenge.
First, the colonies are an assemblage of near shore
rocks and mainland cliffs at three colony
locations. Also, there may be several human-caused
factors, unique to this area, that are limiting the
recovery of the colonies (e.g., gillnet mortality,
disturbances).
Over the past four years
we have documented disturbances by fishing boats,
aircraft, and natural causes that result in adult
murres flushing from their breeding sites and
exposing their eggs and chicks, which are then
preyed upon or dislodged into the ocean. In 1999
several events impacted the murre colonies. On
April 25, murres were documented being flushed
fourteen times during aircraft filming of the Big
Sur Marathon. Although no eggs were documented
being lost, this event may have delayed the onset
of egg laying, reducing reproductive success. On
June 18 an immature Brown Pelican landed among one
of the largest subcolonies. All adult murres were
flushed, resulting in the loss of at least nine
eggs and seven chicks from our study plot. A third
impact occurred repeatedly over several weeks in
July. Commercial fishing boats, conducting
operations within meters of the breeding colonies,
unknowingly caused adults murres to flush from the
colonies, resulting in many eggs and chicks being
lost. We are working with Sanctuary staff and law
enforcement agencies by providing this disturbance
information to them and educating pilots and boat
captains whenever possible. More concerted
educational efforts may prevent these types of
human-caused disturbances in the future.
Ultimately, the
restoration and monitoring activities taking place
within the Sanctuary will help ensure the long-term
persistence of these important murre
colonies.
--Michael W.
Parker
San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
The Moss
Landing Christmas Bird Count: A 24-Year
Summary
The National Audubon Society sponsored
its 100th annual Christmas Bird Count
between December 16, 1999 and January 3,
2000. These counts, which include over
1,700 areas throughout North America,
utilize volunteers to survey a 15-mile
diameter circle during one calendar day
within a two-week period centered on
Christmas Day.
The first Moss Landing Christmas Bird
Count (MLCBC) was held on January 2, 1976;
its date was changed to January 1 in 1977.
The count includes the city of Pajaro; the
beach-front communities from La Selva
Beach to Moss Landing; the agricultural
areas around Corralitos, Aromas, and
Prunedale; and the extensive system of
lakes, ponds, and sloughs scattered
throughout this region. The total number
of species recorded on count day has
ranged from 175 species (in 1977) to 214
species (in 1988); the cumulative total
number of species seen for all years is
294. The daily totals have consistently
been within the top 10 counts nationally
during MLCBC's 24-year history. The
highest total number of individuals seen
was 135,514 in 1988; the lowest number
seen was 63,207 in 1976. On our January 1,
1999 count, 87 observers identified 204
species and tallied 84,359 individual
birds.
The main environmental factor that
distinguishes the MLCBC from neighboring
counts is the extensive wetlands
associated with Elkhorn Slough and the
myriad bird populations that this
ecosystem supports. The Western Hemisphere
Shorebird Reserve Network has designated
Elkhorn Slough as a site of regional
importance for shorebirds—that is, a
wetland that supports at least 20,000
shorebirds at some time during a year.
During its 24-year history, the MLCBC
has reported 30 shorebird species within
the Elkhorn Slough area; 22 species of
shorebirds are regularly seen in this area
each year. Over the past 10 years, the
total number of shorebirds in the main
channel of Elkhorn Slough and the adjacent
ponds of the Moss Landing Wildlife
Management area has ranged from 33,435
individuals in 1990 to 6,496 individuals
in 1999. The 13 most abundant species
(based on median values) were the Western
Sandpiper, Least Sandpiper, Dunlin,
Marbled Godwit, Willet, American Avocet,
Long-Billed Dowitcher, Black-Bellied
Plover, Short-Billed Dowitcher,
Long-Billed Curlew, Sanderling,
Black-Necked Stilt, and Semipalmated
Plover. Western Sandpipers represented 38
percent to 59 percent of the total number
of shorebirds, and the "peeps" (Western
Sandpiper, Least Sandpiper, and Dunlin)
accounted for 79 percent to 93 percent of
the total number of shorebirds.
In his introduction for the American
Birds 88th Christmas Bird Count issue,
Geoffrey LeBaron writes: "If I had my
druthers, which count would I have been on
last year? Edmonton, Alberta? Orange
County or Moss Landing in California?" The
continued protection of our precious
resources afforded by the Monterey Bay
National Marine Sanctuary will ensure that
people can ponder this question in
centuries to come.
--Bernadette Ramer
--Bob Ramer, Santa Cruz Bird Club
|

|
Seabirds
within Monterey Bay--Observations of the
Quick and the Dead
|

|

|
Figure
1: Beach segments within Monterey Bay
sampled by Beach Combers volunteers and
representative grid of offshore transect
lines.
|
Seabirds
are excellent indicators of ecosystem health
because they are large, easily counted, and
consumers of important trophic level species such
as krill, anchovies, and squid. A beach monitoring
study, utilizing volunteers sampling selected
sections of beach for dead seabirds, was
established within the Monterey Bay National Marine
Sanctuary in May 1997. The primary goal of the
program, designated Beach COMBERS (Coastal Ocean
Mammal / Bird Education and Research Surveys) was
to obtain information on stranding rates for all
species of seabirds and marine mammals.
During 1999 Beach COMBERS
volunteers counted and marked beachcast seabirds
monthly within designated beach segments, covering
51 km of sandy beaches within and around Monterey
Bay (Figure 1). Because the presence and abundance
of seabirds at sea is variable and affects
beachcast data, monthly pelagic surveys of seabirds
were conducted from May-October aboard the R/V John
Martin along a random grid of transect lines,
spaced at 5.6 km intervals. All seabirds within 100
m of the ship were counted.
Counts of beachcast
seabirds during January-October 1999 were five
times lower and less variable than during the same
period in 1998, an El Niño year. The
greatest deposition occurred during October and was
dominated by Common Murres (Figure 2). Densities of
live birds within the bay were highest during May,
when large surface aggregations of krill were
encountered. Seabird assemblages at sea were
dominated by Sooty Shearwaters in every month
except October. Post-breeding Common Murres were
abundant during August. Despite the overwhelming
densities of live Sooty Shearwaters in the bay,
relatively few were beachcast. In contrast, Common
Murres appeared to be over-represented on the beach
relative to their densities in the water. The
reason for this pattern was not clear because the
cause of death of encountered beachcast seabirds
was rarely known. Post-breeding Common Murres are
flightless and capable of diving to depths ranging
from 50 to 180 m to feed themselves and their
chicks. This behavior may subject them to mortality
uncommon to other seabird species, such as
entanglement in halibut set gillnets (see related
article in Harvested
Species Section).

|
Figure
2: Results of Beach COMBERS survey (top
figure) and at-sea counts (bottom figure)
of seabirds during 1999.
|
Beach COMBERS volunteers are collecting fresh
beachcast seabirds for necropsy by personnel at the
state's Oil Spill Prevention and Response facility
in Santa Cruz. These samples, combined with birds
taken incidentally in the local set gillnet
fishery, will improve our ability to assess causes
of death and increase our understanding of the
health of nearshore habitats. We greatly appreciate
the dedication of the many highly skilled
volunteers who make this monitoring project
possible.
--Scott R. Benson
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
|