No targets are currently set for this indicator.
These breeding and over-wintering marine birds reside in Puget Sound most, if not all, of the year and, in concert with other species and habitats, help indicate the health of Puget Sound. Marine habitats are critical to their successful reproduction, survival and to critical life history requirements such as molt and over-winter survival. As a result, the indicator provides an integrative view of the health of species that depend upon the Puget Sound for survival.
Species in the marine bird indicator are displaying different abundance patterns over time.
Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife Seabird Ecology Program
Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife Seabird Ecology Program
To help inform our breeding season trends, we also use citizen science derived information on pigeon guillemot reproduction from the Salish Sea Guillemot Network. See Methods and More Results.
The marine bird population indicator measures at-sea population abundance and trends of four bird species that nest locally or over-winter in the marine environment. The indicator includes:
The information used to derive the estimates for over-wintering and breeding birds come from two long-term Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) survey efforts. The spring/summer surveys are boat-based and are part of the Northwest Forest Plan Effectiveness Monitoring Program for the marbled murrelet. During these surveys, observers also record other species detected such as the pigeon guillemot and rhinoceros auklet. These are boat-based, line-transect surveys using a stratified random design to produce estimates by three inland strata and for the entire U.S. portion of the Salish Sea. WDFW also conducts mid-winter surveys from an airplane that allow us to assess abundance and trends of scoters and other over-wintering species. These surveys cover the entire shoreline of the US Salish Sea, as well as a series of "offshore" transects established to estimate bird densities by both Salish Sea basins (e.g., Whidbey Basin) and depth strata. For details on WDFW's survey methods and results, see Marine Birds Research and Monitoring and the published marbled murrelet survey methods.
The marine bird indicator was officially endorsed by the Science Panel at their April 9, 2014 meeting. The endorsement was based on a peer-reviewed report written jointly by the WDFW and the Puget Sound Partnership. The report, Marine and Terrestrial Bird Indicators for Puget Sound, develops, presents, and uses a transparent process to identify and evaluate potential indicators and ultimately recommend marine bird indicators.
The peer-review process was coordinated by the Puget Sound Partnership Science Panel in 2013. The report was finalized in April of 2014. The indicators were also endorsed by the Leadership Council in January 2014. Supplemental material to the report is linked here (Bird Indicator Supplementary material).
TRENDS
Sound-wide, the density of pigeon guillemots and rhinoceros auklet has varied from year-to-year, but with no overall trend over the past 20 years. In contrast, the marbled murrelet density has declined by nearly 5% per year over the past 20 years (95% confidence interval (CI) = -7.0 – -2.9). In 2020, the population size of marbled murrelets in Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca was estimated at 3,140 birds (95% CI = 2,030–4,590 birds). Most of the murrelet population was found in the Admiralty Inlet, San Juan Islands, and Strait of Juan de Fuca regions. The 2020 population estimates for the rhinoceros auklet and pigeon guillemot in Puget Sound and Strait of Juan de Fuca was 16,290 (95% CI = 8,670–26,120) and 6,430 (95% CI = 5,300–8,120) respectively. Although there was no apparent population trend for either the auklet or guillemot, the 2020 estimates were the lowest (auklet) and one of the lowest (guillemot) densities observed in the 20-year data series.
For scoters (surf, black, and white-winged scoter species combined), the density of birds has declined by 2% per year between 2001 and 2020. In the winter of 2020, WDFW estimates that there were 59,550 (95% CI =54,340–64,870) scoters (black, surf, & white-winged scoters) in the Salish Sea.
More information on the distributions and densities of select marine birds can be found in the Marine Bird Webmap.
Species | Annual Rate (%) | 95% Lower Confidence Limit for Annual Rate | 95% Upper Confidence Limit for Annual Rate | Adjusted R2 | P-value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marbled murrelet | -4.96 | -7.01 | -2.86 | 0.579 | 0.0002 |
Pigeon guillemot | -0.30 | -1.95 | 1.38 | 0.053 | 0.7098 |
Rhinoceros auklet | -0.57 | -3.25 | 2.19 | 0.050 | 0.665 |
Scoters | -2.02 | -2.96 | -1.08 | 0.534 | 0.0003 |
REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS, DIET AND OTHER FACTORS INFORMING THE INDICATORS
Marbled murrelet
Although the marbled murrelet spends the vast majority of its life at-sea foraging on fish, it is also dependent on forest habitats where it nests on branches of large trees. The species is federally listed as threatened and is also listed as threatened by the state of Washington. To better understand marbled murrelet decline, and to inform conservation planning to recover the species, researchers evaluated how terrestrial and marine factors influenced the distribution and abundance of the murrelet in coastal waters of the U.S. (link).
In 2016, researchers completed a 20-year review of the status and trends of murrelet populations and nesting habitat (link). They found that the murrelet populations in California and Oregon did not exhibit a population trend while the Washington population was declining. They also found that numbers of birds on the water were positively correlated with amounts and pattern (large contiguous patches) of suitable nesting habitat, and that population trend was most strongly correlated with trend in nesting habitat although marine factors also contributed. Their results suggest that conservation of suitable nesting habitat is key to murrelet conservation, but marine factors, especially factors that contribute to murrelet prey abundance, may play a role in murrelet distribution and trend. A 25-year report was recently completed and is currently in press and will be available in the coming months.
The US Navy funded annual at-sea non-breeding (September–March) murrelet monitoring in the Puget Sound region since 2012/2013 (fall through spring Salish Sea boat surveys). Eight years of surveys suggest that non-breeding declines are much greater than breeding season declines, with an estimated annual deline of 13.5% (95% CI = -20.7 – -5.6) (link). A manuscript exploring non-breeding trends is currently in progress and will be submitted to a journal for peer-review in 2021.
Rhinoceros auklet
Rhinoceros auklets nest in burrows on Smith and Protection Islands in the Eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca. Protection Island, managed jointly by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (primarily) and WDFW, is a globally important nesting site for rhinoceros auklets with over 35,000 occupied burrows (link). Peter Hodum (University of Puget Sound), Tom Good (NOAA Fisheries), Eric Wagner (Center for Ecosystem Sentinels, University of Washington), and Scott Pearson (WDFW) have monitored the colony on Protection Island since 2006.
Prior to a highly anomalous breeding season in 2016, rhinoceros auklet focal breeding parameters, including burrow occupancy (the proportion of burrows that were reproductively active), hatching success and fledging success, exhibited little inter-annual variability. However, fledging success in 2016 was the lowest recorded in our time series, as a consequence of a large-scale adult mortality that led to fewer adults able to provision their chicks to fledging. Fledging success in 2019 (0.86) was slightly higher than the long-term mean value of 0.79. Burrow occupancy in 2019 (0.73) returned to the long-term mean of 0.72 following depressed rates in 2017 and 2018, presumably as a consequence of the 2016 mortality event. Hatching success, unaffected throughout the anomalous seasons, continued to be consistent in 2019 (0.89 vs. long-term mean of 0.86). Nestling provisioning on Protection Island, as measured by fish per bill load and bill load weight, was comparable to long-term values in all three years (2017–2019) following the 2016 perturbation. The composition of dominant fish prey species, predominantly Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes personatus), did not vary between years. The return in 2019 of burrow occupancy to the long-term average coupled with hatching and fledging success values comparable to long-term values and average nestling provisioning suggest that the Rhinoceros Auklet breeding population on Protection Island has recovered from the multi-year impacts of the 2016 breeding failure.
Top Panel: Proportion of Protection Island rhinoceros auklet burrows that were occupied (an egg was laid); Middle Panel: Of the occupied nests, the proportion of eggs that hatched; and Bottom Panel: the proportion of chicks that reached fledging age (mostly feathered).
Source: Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife & University of Puget Sound
Pigeon guillemot
Pigeon guillemots nest most commonly on cliff faces, crevices among boulders and occasionally in piles of driftwood, or in man-made structures such as wharfs, pipes and bridges (e.g. Hood Canal Bridge). Ongoing citizen-science monitoring by residents of Whidbey Island (2008-2020) indicates lower reproductive success (burrows with chicks) for the past 3-4 years, which could ultimately influence future population trends. Interestingly, the data also suggest a change in chick diet in recent years with a decrease in gunnels (family Pholidae) provided to chicks in 2018 and 2019 and an increase in sculpin (Cottoidea) provisioning since 2016. These diet and reproductive changes warrant additional study and observation to assess their ultimate impact on local populations. Note that there is now an active network of citizen science groups monitoring guillemots throughout the Sound and future Vital Sign updates will include data from the entire Nework, which includes citizen science data from Whidbey Island, South Sound, Olympic Penninsula, Kitsap Penninsula, and Vashon and Maury islands.
Source: Salish Sea Guillemot Network
Scoters
Three scoter species (surf, black and white-winged) over-winter in the Salish Sea. They spend about eight months of the year in this region, with some non-breeding individuals here year-round. While over-wintering, they forage, replace their feathers and put on weight needed to successfully reproduce in high arctic lakes in the summer. Research by Vilchis et al. (2015) indicates that over-wintering species were three times more likely to exhibit population declines in the Salish Sea than local breeders; scoters declined in 9% of the 67 depth/basin strata evaluated between 1994 and 2010. In general, Vilchis et al (2015) found that alcids (species like the marbled murrelet and common murre) and sea ducks (species like the scoters) dominated the over-wintering bird community during the 1990s, whereas non-diving bird species and diving species with diverse diets dominated the wintering bird community in the 2000s. Recent work by Ethier et al. (2020) the British Columbia Coastal Waterbird Survey examining 20 years of Salish Sea and coastal marine bird trends also found significant declines for all three scoter species in the Salish Sea but no significant trends for the B.C. coast. This research suggests that benthic forage species, like scoters, are demonstrating the steepest 20-year declines among all species groups examined.
Please see Interpretation of Results
REFERENCES
Vilchis LI, Johnson CK, Evenson JR, Pearson SF, Barry KL, Davidson P, Raphael MG, Gaydos JK.2015. Assessing ecological correlates of marine bird declines to inform marine conservation. Conservation Biology 29(1): 154-163. PDF
Ethier, D., P. Davidson, G. H. Sorenson, K. L. Barry, K. Devitt, C. B. Jardine, D. Lepage, and D. W. Bradley. 2020. Twenty years of coastal waterbird trends suggest regional patterns of environmental pressure in British Columbia, Canada. Avian Conservation and Ecology 15(2):20. PDF
EXTERNAL LINKS
Overview of the birds and mammals that depend upon the Salish Sea
Background information on marine bird habitats in Washington
Guidance and considerations for setting marine bird vital sign targets
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