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The northern reaches of the Pacific Ocean can feel endless鈥攃old gray swells rolling beneath sky-darkening clouds, thousands of seabirds riding the winds or resting in rafts on the water. Murres dive in unison, fulmars shear the waves, storm-petrels gather in flocks at night. For millennia, these seas have belonged to the birds. But today, they鈥檙e increasingly shared with something far larger: ships.
As cargo vessels thread through the Aleutians and armored oil tankers push through the Bering Strait, it鈥檚 clear that marine traffic is booming in Alaska鈥檚 waters. a new study published in Conservation Biology, charts, for the first time at a statewide scale, where and when seabirds and ships overlap. The findings 鈥攎igration bottlenecks during stormy autumn nights and immobile molting periods鈥攚hen seabirds are most vulnerable to disturbance, collisions, or disorientation.
鈥淲e were able to quantify this on a scale covering nearly the entire Alaska marine environment,鈥 says Ben Sullender, Director of Geospatial Science at 探花精选 Alaska. 鈥淭hat really has been unprecedented to sort of put a pin in this issue and say, 鈥楾his is where we鈥檙e at right now.鈥欌
The research team, led by postdoctoral researcher Kelly Kapsar, seabird biologist Kathy Kuletz, and Sullender, combined 16 years of seabird surveys with eight years of satellite-based vessel tracking. The result: seasonal 鈥渞isk maps鈥 showing where bird abundance and vessel density coincide.
Some hotspots were no big shocker, like Unimak Pass鈥攖he easternmost entrance through the Aleutian Islands. Publishing the put the area on 探花精选鈥檚 radar in 2017.
鈥淚 certainly was not surprised about Unimak Pass, having been through there many times,鈥 Kuletz says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a super hot spot for boats and birds. It has been for a long time.鈥
The Bering Strait also stood out, though perhaps less dramatically than expected. 鈥淭he Bering Strait doesn't really stand out unless you look at the North Bering and Chukchi Sea separately,鈥 Kuletz says. 鈥淚 was surprised that it didn't show up to a greater degree in the all-Alaska analysis. I think it's just swamped by what's happening in the Aleutians.鈥
Kapsar says one spot that did catch her attention was, 鈥淧rince William Sound showing up as a big area,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t has a lot of ferry routes and commercial fishing in the summer and is also an important nesting area 鈥 especially in summer, the vessel traffic is much higher, and that overlapped with seabirds as well.鈥
From Kodiak Island to the Aleutians, from Prince William Sound to the high Arctic, the maps make clear that seabirds and ships are sharing the same waters鈥攁nd sometimes, the same time and space.
If birds and ships have coexisted for decades, why the concern now? One major driver is climate change. As sea ice retreats later and later in the fall, vessels can operate for longer periods, Kapsar explains. At that same time of year, daylight is declining, storm events are rising, and birds are migrating. That overlap can increase nighttime interactions, which is when we know bird strikes are most likely to occur. Some mariners have taken to calling these interactions 鈥渂ird storms鈥 鈥攐r when a flock of birds gets ensnared by the vessel鈥檚 light, with often fatal consequences.
Shifting fisheries are another factor. Russian trawlers and longliners now follow the edge of retreating sea ice northward, sometimes pushing past the Bering Strait. On the U.S. side, while fishing north of 60掳 latitude is restricted, vessels are still probing farther into high latitudes. 鈥淭hat opens up populations that hadn鈥檛 previously been exposed to fishing pressure or incidental bycatch,鈥 says Kuletz.
Arctic resource extraction is driving more ship traffic through sensitive seabird habitats. A major influence is the Red Dog mine, which sends enormous volumes of unprocessed ore through the Bering Strait for processing elsewhere, a significant contributor to vessel traffic in the region.
And another phenomenon has to do with Russian oil and gas tankers re-routing. Sullender says the Russo-Ukrainian War has sparked Russian economic interest in making the most of whatever resources they have in their Arctic. As European markets for Russian oil have dried up, Russian tanker traffic has diverted to serve Asian markets and travel through the Bering Strait. As a result, vessel traffic through there has 鈥渂een just going absolutely crazy.鈥
Where once the Arctic鈥檚 ice and remoteness shielded seabirds from vessels, warming seas are erasing that buffer.
Not all seabirds are equally at risk. Some species鈥 behaviors make them particularly vulnerable to disturbance or disorientation.
Take eiders, which Kuletz says are a species more impacted and disoriented by lights emitted from vessels than many others. Storm-petrels, too, which travel in very large flocks, 鈥済et disoriented and perhaps attracted to the lights on dark and stormy nights,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when they run into the ships.鈥
Light pollution isn鈥檛 the only problem. Molting sea ducks are literally grounded. 鈥淏irds molting on the water might be subject to disturbance, not flying into the boat, but actually being disturbed as the boats are cruising through鈥攁nd that鈥檚 because they鈥檙e flightless,鈥 Kuletz explains. Juvenile murres, still flightless and dependent on their male parents at sea, are an example of a species unable to escape.
鈥淭hese are literally sitting ducks that cannot fly out of the way,鈥 Sullender adds. Discharged waste doesn't magically disappear; it just gets churned up into the ocean. 鈥淎nd if a vessel is passing right through a big flock of molting sea ducks right as they're discharging oily waste, for example, that could be a huge problem. That's going to stay pretty localized in that area for quite a while.鈥
From fulmars following fishing vessels to shearwaters rafting by the tens of thousands, each species interacts differently with ships, explains Kapsar. 鈥淚t's kind of this matchup between the ecology of the species and what the ship is doing in the area.鈥
Kuletz recalls her own experiences on research vessels, where best practices were mandatory. Crews had to reduce lights and have someone on watch all the time to avoid going through large flocks of birds. She says fishing vessels have their own restrictions, but shipping and tourism may not.
But the good news: solutions exist, and many are already in practice. Routing ships away from seabird concentrations, setting seasonal restrictions, and dimming or shielding deck lights could dramatically reduce risks.
In fact, putting these solutions into practice has already happened twice for Alaskan waters in the last 15 years. 鈥淚n the Aleutians, the International Maritime Organization designated Areas To Be Avoided around certain islands,鈥 Sullender says. And in the Bering Strait, 探花精选 Alaska took a lead position in a coalition of nonprofit groups and highlighted Areas To Be Avoided, as well as recommended routes. In a separate effort, Sullender, Kapsar, and collaborators also looked at compliance rates and saw that more than 90% of vessels comply with these recommendations.
Speed limits, , are less clear-cut for birds. 鈥淪peed limits are not a one-size-fits-all solution,鈥 Sullender says. 鈥淭hey may actually be counterproductive. They could keep boats in areas where birds hang out for longer, discharging and emitting noise and light for longer.鈥 Thus, the team says carefully timed spatial protections should be more effective.
The team also stresses that they don鈥檛 want mariners to upend their practices, but by carefully targeting actions like minimizing light pollution at the times and places that matter most to birds, conservation efforts can be more effective in helping seabirds navigate a changing Arctic.
鈥淪hips are not bad writ large. They鈥檙e critically important, especially in the north, for supporting small, remote communities,鈥 Kapsar says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not out here advocating to ban shipping. We鈥檙e saying there are reasonable changes that can reduce risk to seabirds.鈥
For birders reading from afar, the problem can feel distant. But there are ways to help.
Local fishing families can play a crucial role by reporting bird strikes or mass disorientation events鈥攖he so-called bird storms鈥攚hen they happen. 鈥淭hat would be useful information,鈥 says Kuletz. 鈥淚f it were compiled.鈥 A summary of more information on when, where, species, and under what conditions bird strikes occur could further inform efforts to reduce such interactions.
Public engagement also matters. As the U.S. Coast Guard and the International Maritime Organization consider future routing and safety plans, they open public comment periods. 探花精选 Alaska gets involved directly with these efforts and works with spatial analysts within the Coast Guard to ensure that birds and other wildlife are part of the planning picture.
And for birders at home? Education and advocacy. Kuletz pointed to bird-minded groups in Hawaii that successfully pushed for shielded lights to protect petrels and shearwaters. Similar grassroots efforts could someday shape lighting standards in Alaska鈥檚 ports and harbors.
For this team, the study is just a starting point. Kuletz says the paper wasn鈥檛 about population-level effects, 鈥渂ut the paper does recognize that there's going to be differences in impacts among species.鈥 She recommends, for bigger picture studies, looking at the species. Rare species with small ranges, like Whiskered Auklet, could be impacted even with very little interaction.
Kapsar agrees. 鈥淚f we were making a wish list, I really think some sort of monitoring network and reporting system, like Kathy was saying, for these bird strikes would be critical right now,鈥 she says, noting there are anecdotal data sets of bird strikes, but no systematic way of logging them. 鈥淲e can see there's vessels here, there's birds here, but we don't have a way of knowing what's happening.鈥
For Sullender, the work is also about dialogue with mariners. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to sit down at the same table,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut in order to do that and walk through these issues, we need to be armed with data. And that鈥檚 what this paper provides. It's a good foundation for future conversations.鈥
Alaska鈥檚 seabirds have long weathered storms, darkness, and ice. Now, newer challenges can come in the form of steel hulls and glowing lights. With science, collaboration, and timely action, birders and mariners alike can help ensure these species continue to soar over our northern seas.