News

Seabird Island News - Vol. 10 - 28 July 2023

Outer Green Island's Use It Up Challenge Items
The team on Outer Green Island certainly received props for plating during this year’s “Use It Up” challenge. Photo: Outer Green Island

While there are still a few weeks left in the season, research teams are preparing for their time on the islands to end. One sure sign things are winding down is the annual “Use It Up” Challenge. This year’s challenge focused on sandwiches. Points were awarded for using the oldest food, but the sandwiches needed to be edible. The team got together to share their creations over zoom, but winners won’t be announced until the annual Gulf of Maine Seabirds Working Group (GOMSWG) Meeting and 50th Anniversary Celebration in early August.

Did you see the summer issue of Audubon Magazine? Contributing Editor, Renee Ebersole, dives deep in an oral history feature on Project Puffin.  This week, the magazine released an expanded, online version of the story with multimedia content. Be sure to bookmark and share with your friends!

Matinicus Rock Puffling
Puffin chicks are getting grubbed, banded, and placed back into their burrows. Fledge watch is ON! Photo: Matinicus Rock

Alcid Update

Puffling fledging is on the rise. Puffin chicks on all of our puffin islands were seen sticking their heads out of their burrows to get a glimpse of life in the great beyond. A Matinicus Rock resighting stint revealed that the wandering Tufted Puffin had returned to the island for a visit. The team on Outer Green Island is on fledge watch for their guillemots!

Egg Rock Island Roseate Tern fledgling
This Egg Rock Roseate Tern fledgling is practicing its wingwork. Photo: Meg Getzinger

Tern Update

Jenny Island saw the last of its study chicks fledge last weekend and the skies are becoming increasingly quiet as more of their birds embark on their migratory journey. Teams are excited to see their fledglings during resighting stints. Stratton Island celebrated the fledging of a Least Tern which reminded the team of nature’s persistence to survive.

Explore.org

Sometime during the late evening hours of July 23, our beloved on-camera puffling Duryea took a final look at the burrow that he has called home for the past two months and set off on his first pelagic voyage. Fledging, or first flight, is a rite of passage for all birds. From an Old English word meaning “fit to fly,” fledging is the culmination of a birds’ incubation as an egg, the weeks spent being nurtured by parents as a chick, and many final preparatory exercises and explorations. It’s a bittersweet event, as departures often are, signaling the end of our viewing of Dur but the beginning of Dur’s life as a full-fledged puffin. Bon voyage, Dur! 

Both Willie and Millie have returned to the burrow following their fledgling’s departure. Looking mildly confused, and with the requisite bill full of fish (no longer needed), they briefly pop their heads into the burrow and then depart. The occasion marks the end of parental teamwork for the year, but there is plenty of hope for future viewing—the pair has raised a successful fledgling for the fifth year in a row, a testament to their excellent parenting skills. Soon, they’ll take to the high seas themselves, embarking on their annual migrations. But until then, it’s safe to say that Willie and Millie are now, officially, empty nesters.

Duryea’s last day in the burrow
Duryea’s last day in the burrow was business as usual: eat fish, sleep, and explore outside the burrow. But this time Duryea was called to the high seas! Photo: explore.org
Millie in the burrow with fish and no Duryea
More for me! Shortly after seeing the empty burrow, Millie took her beakful of fish and enjoyed them al fresco on the Puffin Burrow Exterior Cam. You can view the cam here: https://explore.org/livecams/birds/puffin-burrow-exterior-view Photo: explore.org

To celebrate the fledging milestone that many pufflings have made or will soon be making, you can join the Seal Island research team in a virtual Live Chat hosted by Celeste Flahaven on Tuesday, August 1 at 7pm/ET. The team will talk about the 2023 seabird season and answer live audience questions. Don’t miss this chance to ask seabird researchers about the fantastic work they do all season long!

Link to the live event can be found here: So Long, Seabirds! Season Recap of Seal Island’s Puffin Colony | Explore Live Events 

So Long Seabirds with Celeste Flahaven Preview

Island Highlights

Theresa Rizza and Common Tern fledgling
Pond Island NWR Supervisor, Theresa, had a feathered, Common Tern friend come in for a landing after testing out its wings. Photo: Theresa Rizza
Outer Green Island juvenile American Oystercatchers
The team on Outer Green Island saw a juvenile American Oystercatchers with an unusually curved bill. Photo: Outer Green Island
Bird Word of the Week - Countercurrent Heat Exchange

For additional news, please visit the Seabird Island News index page.

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