Published May 21, 2015
U.S. Geological Survey researchers analyzing nearly 40 years of at-sea bird surveys in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea say seabird density has dropped about 2 percent annually since 1975.
Research wildlife biologist John Piatt of the USGS Alaska Science Center says a 2 percent annual decline would translate into an overall decline in numbers and biomass of 50 percent or more through 2012.
He calls the preliminary results a significant decline.
Surveys were conducted in hundreds of ship transits.
Piatt says the decline may be tied to less food availability, a consequence of warmer ocean temperatures.
The review does not include counts at nesting colonies. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service seabird researcher David Irons says colony data indicates a decline that leveled off after 2000.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/feds-review-of-4-decades-of-north-pacific-seabird-surveys-indicates-2-percent-loss-annually