They really do have a rare bird at Channel Islands National Park: For the first time in a century biologists have spotted California Common Murre chicks on one of the park's islands.
The hatchlings were spotted in July on Prince Island, an islet next to San Miguel Island, and marked the first time since 1912 that Murre (Uria aalge californica) chicks had hatched on the Channel Islands.
Murres are football-sized seabirds with the tuxedo colors of penguins — except they can both fly in the air and dive down to 500 feet underwater. Historically, murres nested on Prince Island — a small islet off San Miguel Island within Channel Islands National Park. This colony disappeared nearly a century ago, likely a result of human disturbance and egg harvesting.
According to a USGS release, Common Murres in California are most abundant off central through northern California with tens to hundreds of thousands of birds nesting at the Farallon Islands, off Trinidad Head, and at Castle Rock National Wildlife Refuge.
“This is an exciting finding — certainly a historic one,” says Josh Adams, a seabird ecologist with the USGS Western Ecological Research Center. “The murres appear to have reestablished their former southern range, perhaps benefitting from present ocean conditions.”
The new colony is perched on 100-foot-high sea cliffs, and was spotted by Mr. Adams, USGS biologist Jonathan Felis, and their Channel Islands National Park colleagues, Laurie Harvey and David Mazurkeiwicz, during their research trips to the remote windswept island this summer.
Using photographic documentation during three visits between late June and early July, Mr. Felis repeatedly counted some 125 birds and estimated that over half appeared to be incubating or brooding chicks. A single broken eggshell was observed on July 12 amidst several adults holding fish in their bills.
NPS biologist Harvey and murre biologist Mike Parker later observed several well-developed chicks on July 28.
According to biologists, for the first two weeks of their life "murre chicks are fed at the colony by their parents, which use their wings to propel themselves underwater and dive for anchovies, sardines and juvenile rockfishes. At about two weeks of age, murre chicks waddle off the cliff edges to the surf below. They join their fathers, which raise the chicks at sea until they are capable of diving and feeding on their own."
With this murre colony, Prince Island now hosts 13 nesting seabirds, making it one of the most important and biologically diverse nesting habitats on the West Coast of North America, according to USGS officials.
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