Wildlife
Ring of Fire
Bogoslof Birds
Seabirds
Respond to Volcanos Changing Habitat
Adapted
from -- G. Vernon Byrd, George J. Divoky, and Edgar P. Bailey. 1980. Changes in
marine bird and mammal populations on an active volcano in Alaska. The Murrelet.
61:50-62.
Nesting habitat for birds on volcanic Bogoslof
Island (54oN, 168oW), Alaska, has changed constantly
since this island emerged from the sea starting in 1796. Bird populations have
fluctuated with those changes.
Rock cliffs formed, eroded into boulders,
and then broke down into soil which supported vegetation. During the period of
greatest recorded land mass (late 1800s), cliff-nesting habitat was at least 17
times greater at Bogoslof and 25 times greater at Fire Island than in the 1973
when censuses were again taken on this one-mile-long island.
Murres increased
the most after cliff formation, reaching peak numbers by the late 1800s. The 1899
Harriman Expedition stopped on Bogoslof Island and C. Hart Merriam described the
murres as darkening the sky when flushed off their cliffs.
With later cliff
reduction, the murre population decreased proportionally, reaching a low of less
than 100,000 by 1935.
Cliff-nesting black-legged kittiwakes and cormorants
may have followed a similar pattern. Without another eruption, cliff nesting habitat
will continue to decrease. Cliffs along the edges of Bogoslofs plateau are
eroding at a more rapid rate than at adjacent Castle Rock, Kenyon Dome, and Fire
Island.
Boulder-strewn beaches have periodically provided potential nesting
habitat for pigeon guillemots and horned puffins at Bogoslof, but the light pumice-like
boulders soon eroded into sand, making this habitat available only briefly. Boulder
habitat could be created again on Bogoslof only by another eruption.
Kenyon
Dome, composed primarily of basalt columns, is a relatively stable structure which
should provide long-term habitat for crevice nesters such as horned puffins.
The
erosion of volcanic rocks into soil helped to form habitat for burrow-nesting
birds. Formation of the plateau in the early 1900s was the first habitat of this
sort on Bogoslof. The two burrowing species that now breed on Bogoslof (fork-tailed
storm-petrel and tufted puffin) have only been found breeding here since the 1930s.
The increase in tufted puffins has been phenomenal - from 60 to 5,000 birds in 27 years. Only since 1950 has the cover of vegetation
stabilized the soil enough to prevent burrows from easily collapsing. The formation
of a vegetated slope (Puffin Slope) has been key to the tufted puffin increase.
The
increase in vegetation also is correlated with the presence of glaucous-winged
gulls, winter wrens and song sparrows. All of these birds require plants for nest
material.
The changes in the composition and abundance of birds on Bogoslof
Island provide a ongoing example of the colonization by seabirds of a recently-formed
volcano.
NOTE: In 1909 President Theodore Roosevelt dedicated Bogoslof
and Fire islands as a sanctuary for sea lions and nesting marine birds. They are
now part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. The islands were added
to the National Wilderness Preservation System in 1970.
Learn More
about Wildlife on Bogoslof Island
Radio Interview
Transcript, contrasting red-legged kittiwakes of Bogoslof and Pribilof
islands (includes link to audio)
Effects
of Food Stress on reproductive performance of seabirds at Pribilofs and Bogoslof
Islands, Bering Sea(includes photos)
Last updated:September 8, 2008
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