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Thick-billed murre

The thick-billed murre or Brünnich's guillemot (Uria lomvia) is a bird in the auk family (Alcidae). This bird is named after the Danish zoologist Morten Thrane Brünnich. The very deeply black North Pacific subspecies Uria lomvia arra is also called Pallas' murre after its describer. The genus name is from Ancient Greek ouria, a waterbird mentioned by Athenaeus. The species term lomvia is a Swedish word for an auk or diver.[2] The English "guillemot" is from French guillemot probably derived from Guillaume, "William".[3] "Murre" is of uncertain origins, but may imitate the call of the common guillemot.[4]

Thick-billed murre
Adults in breeding plumage
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Alcidae
Genus: Uria
Species:
U. lomvia
Binomial name
Uria lomvia
Subspecies

Uria lomvia lomvia(Linnaeus, 1758)
U. l. eleonorae(Portenko, 1937)
Uria lomvia heckeri(Portenko, 1944)
U. l. arra(Pallas, 1811)

Synonyms

Alca lomvia Linnaeus, 1758

Murres have the highest flight cost, for their body size, of any animal.[5]

Description edit

 
Head color in breeding plumage is identical in all Brünnich's guillemots

Since the extinction of the great auk in the mid-19th century, the murres are the largest living members of the Alcidae.[6] The thick-billed murre and the closely related common guillemot (or common murre, U. aalge) are similarly sized, but the thick-billed still bests the other species in both average and maximum size. The thick-billed murre measures 40–48 cm (16–19 in) in total length, spans 64–81 cm (25–32 in) across the wings and weighs 736–1,481 g (26.0–52.2 oz).[7][8][9] The Pacific race (U. l. arra) is larger than the Atlantic race, especially in bill dimensions.[10]

Adult birds are black on the head, neck, back and wings with white underparts. The bill is long and pointed. They have a small rounded black tail. The lower face becomes white in winter. This species produces a variety of harsh cackling calls at the breeding colonies, but is silent at sea.

They differ from the common murre in their thicker, shorter bill with white gape stripe and their darker head and back; the "bridled" morph is unknown in U. lomvia – a murre has either a white eye-stripe, or a white bill-stripe, or neither, but never both; it may be that this is character displacement, enabling individual birds to recognize conspecifics at a distance in the densely packed breeding colonies as the bridled morph is most common by far in North Atlantic colonies where both species of guillemots breed. In winter, there is less white on the thick-billed murre's face. They look shorter than the common murre in flight. First year birds have smaller bills than adults and the white line on the bill is often obscure, making the bill an unreliable way to identify them at this age. The head pattern is the best way to distinguish first-year birds from common murres.[11]

Distribution edit

 
Adult and chick, Buldir Island, Alaska

The thick-billed murre is distributed across the polar and sub-polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere where four subspecies exist; one lives on the Atlantic and Arctic oceans of North America (U. l. lomvia), another on the Pacific coast of North America (U. l. arra), and two others that inhabit the Russian arctic (U.l.eleonorae and U.heckeri).[12][13]

Habitat edit

Thick-billed murres spend all of their lives at sea in waters which remain below 8°C,[12] except during the breeding season where they form dense colonies on cliffs.[12][13]

Breeding edit

 
Breeding colony at Stappen, Bear Island. Note bill-stripes visible at a distance.
 
Egg, Collection Museum Wiesbaden

Thick-billed murres form vast breeding colonies, sometimes composed of over a million breeding birds, on narrow ledges and steep cliffs which face the water.[13] They have the smallest territory of any bird,[13] requiring less than one square foot per individual.[12] A breeding pair will lay a single egg each year.[12][14] Despite this, they are one of the most abundant marine birds in the Northern Hemisphere.[13]

Adults perform communal displays early in the breeding season to time their breeding cycles.[12] They do not build nests, but lay the egg directly on bare rock.[12] Both parents are involved in incubating the egg and raising the young.[15][16] Due to the enormous amount of energy needed to take off in flight, adults can only provide one food item at a time to their chick.[13] Chicks spend between 18 and 25 days on the cliffs before leaving for the sea.[12][13] Once ready to leave, the young will await nightfall and jump off the edge towards the water.[13] A parent immediately jumps after and glides within centimeters of the fledgling.[15] At sea, the male and the chick stay together for around 8 weeks during which the adult continues to provide food for the young.[13]

Survival rates of the young is not based on the number of individuals in the colony, but rather on the age of the breeders within the colony.[12] Offspring of inexperienced pairs grow more slowly than those of experienced breeders, possibly because they do not receive as much food from their parents.[14] Also, pairs which contain at least one young breeding bird tend to have lower hatch rates.[17] Older and experienced adults obtain the better nesting sites located in the center of the colony, while the inexperienced individuals are kept on the margins[12] where their young are more likely to be preyed upon.[18]

Migratory patterns edit

They move south in winter into northernmost areas of the north Atlantic and Pacific, but only to keep in ice-free waters.

Flight and feeding characteristics edit

 
Vagrant adult in winter plumage, northern South Carolina
 
Thick-billed murres in Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge

The thick-billed murre's flight is strong and direct, and they have fast wing beats due to the short wings. Like the other auks, these birds forage for food by using their wings to 'swim' underwater.[12] They are accomplished divers, reaching depths of up to 150 m and diving for up to four minutes at a time; usually however birds make either shallow short dives or dive down to 21–40 m for longer periods.[19] While hunting, the diving trajectory resembles a flattened 'U'.[19] Birds will make long trips to get to favorite feeding grounds; while they usually forage several dozen km from their nest sites, they often travel more than 100 km to fish.[20][6] The strong and direct flight of murres, which is, for their body size, the most costly form of sustained locomotion of any animal, is a result of their short wingspan[5]

The diving depths and durations regularly achieved by these birds indicate that they, and similar auks, have some—as yet unknown—mechanism to avoid diving sickness and lung collapse when surfacing.[19] It is postulated that auks temporarily absorb excess gases into the vascular structure of their bones. From there, it is gradually released from temporary storage in a controlled process of decompression.

Trophic linkages edit

The nominate race feeds primarily on fish such as Gadus spp. and Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida),[12] as well as the pelagic amphipod Parathemisto libellula.[13] Other fish such as capelin (Mallotus villosus) and Myoxocephalus spp., as well as other crustaceans, polychaetes, and a few molluscs, are found in their diet but in relatively low numbers.[12] When wintering near Newfoundland, capelin can account for over 90 percent of their diet.[12]

Thick-billed murres have few natural predators because the immense number of concentrated birds found on the breeding colonies and the inaccessibility of these breeding sites make it extremely difficult for them to be preyed upon.[12] Their main predator is the glaucous gull (Larus hyperboreus), and these feed exclusively on eggs and chicks.[15][18] The common raven (Corvus corax) may also try to obtain eggs and hatchlings when they are left unattended.[12][21]

Status and conservation edit

Although declines have been observed in many parts of their range,[12] the thick-billed murre is not a species of concern as the total population is estimated to contain between 15 and 20 million individuals worldwide.[13]

 
Group on rocks, Alaska

Egg harvesting and hunting of adult birds are major threats in Greenland, where populations fell steeply between the 1960s and 1980s.[22] In the Barents Sea region, the species has declined locally, due to influences associated with polar stations in Russia. Fisheries may also be a threat, but because thick-billed murres are better able to use alternative food sources the effect of over-fishing is not as severe as on the common murre. Pollution from oil at sea exerts another major threat. Murres are among the seabirds most sensitive to oil contamination.[23] Incidental mortality brought on by entanglement with fishing gear is also an important cause of population decline.[24]

Thick-billed murres are closely associated with sea-ice throughout the year.[13] Consequently, some scientists believe that climate change may be a threat to this Arctic-breeding species.[25] However the species seems adaptable. Populations at the southern edge of their range switched from feeding on ice-associated Arctic cod to warmer-water capelin[26] as ice break-up became earlier. Dates for egg-laying advanced with the earlier disappearance of ice. The growth of chicks is slower in years when ice break-up is early relative to egg-laying by the murres. In extremely warm years, mosquitoes and heat kill some breeders.[27]

As a vagrant edit

Brünnich's guillemot is a rare vagrant in European countries south of the breeding range. In Britain, over 30 individuals have been recorded, but over half of these were tideline corpses. Of those that were seen alive, only three have remained long enough to be seen by large numbers of observers. All three were in Shetland - winter individuals in February 1987 and November/December 2005, and a bird in an auk colony in summer 1989. The 1989 and 2005 birds were both found by the same observer, Martin Heubeck.

The species has been recorded once in Ireland,[28] and has also been recorded in the Netherlands. In the western Atlantic, they may range as far as Florida,[29] and in the Pacific to California.[6] Before 1950, large numbers appeared on the North American Great Lakes in early winter, passing up the St. Lawrence River from the East coast. Such irruptions have not been seen since 1952.[30]

Notes edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2018). "Uria lomvia". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22694847A132066134. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22694847A132066134.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Jobling, James A (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 229, 396. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  3. ^ "Guillemot". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  4. ^ "Murre". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ a b Elliott, KH; Ricklefs, RE; Gaston, AJ; Hatch, SA; Speakman, JR; Davoren, GK (2013). "High flight costs and low dive costs support the biomechanical hypothesis for flightlessness in penguins". PNAS. 110 (23): 9380–9384. doi:10.1073/pnas.1304838110. PMC 3677478. PMID 23690614.
  6. ^ a b c Nettleship (1996)
  7. ^ "Thick-billed Murre Life History, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology".
  8. ^ . Arctic Watch. Archived from the original on 2016-03-23. Retrieved 19 Jun 2023.
  9. ^ "Detail Page » Gulf of Maine Census".
  10. ^ Gaston & Jones (1998)
  11. ^ Gaston (1984)
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Tuck LM. (1960). The Murres; their distribution, populations and biology: A study of the genus Uria. Ottawa: Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources, National Parks Branch, Canadian Wildlife Service.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Gaston AJ, Hipfner JM. (2000). Thick-billed Murre (Uria lomvia), The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Retrieved from the Birds of North America Online: http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/497doi:10.2173/bna.497
  14. ^ a b Hipfner, JM; Gaston, AJ (2002). "Growth of nestling Thick-billed Murres (Uria lomvia) in relation to parental experience and hatching date". Auk. 119 (3): 827–832. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2002)119[0827:gontbm]2.0.co;2. S2CID 85710661.
  15. ^ a b c Gaston AJ, Nettleship DN. (1981). The Thick-billed Murres of Prince Leopold Island: A study of the breeding ecology of a colonial high Arctic seabird. Ottawa: Environment Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service.
  16. ^ Paredes, R; Jones, IL; Boness, DJ (2006). "Parental roles of male and female Thick-billed Murres and Razorbills at the Gannet Islands, Labrador". Behaviour. 143 (4): 451–481. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.523.583. doi:10.1163/156853906776240641.
  17. ^ DeForest, LN; Gaston, AJ (1996). "The effect of age on timing of breeding and reproductive success in the Thick-billed Murre". Ecology. 77 (5): 1501–1511. doi:10.2307/2265547. JSTOR 2265547.
  18. ^ a b Gilchrist, HG; Gaston, AJ (1997). "Effects of Murre nest site characteristics and wind conditions on predation by Glaucous Gulls". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 75 (4): 518–524. doi:10.1139/z97-064.
  19. ^ a b c Croll, DA; Gaston, AJ; Burger, AE; Konnoff, D (1992). "Foraging behavior and physiological adaptation for diving in Thick-billed Murres". Ecology. 73 (1): 344–356. doi:10.2307/1938746. JSTOR 1938746.
  20. ^ Lilliendahl et al. (2003)
  21. ^ Lepage, D; Nettleship, DN; Reed, A (1998). "Birds of Bylot Island and adjacent Baffin Island, Northwest Territories, Canada, 1979 to 1997". Arctic. 51 (2): 125–141. doi:10.14430/arctic1054.
  22. ^ Evans and Kampp (1991)
  23. ^ Wiese et al. (2003)
  24. ^ Bakken & Pokrovskaya (2000)
  25. ^ Gaston et al. (2005)
  26. ^ Gaston et al. (2003)
  27. ^ Gaston et al. (2002), Parmesan (2006)
  28. ^ "Brünnich's Guillemot in County Wexford - an addition to the Irish list". Irish Birds. 3: 601–605. 1988.
  29. ^ Mullarney, Killian (1998). "First record of the Thick-billed Murre from Florida". Florida Field Naturalist. 3: 88–89.
  30. ^ Gaston (1988)

References edit

  • Bakken, Vidar & Pokrovskaya Irina V. (2000): Brünnich's Guillemot. In: Anker-Nilssen, T.; Bakken, Vidar; Strom, H.; Golovkin, A.N.; Bianki, V.V. & Tatarinkova, I.P. (eds.): The status of marine birds breeding in the Barents sea region. Norwegian Polar Institute Report Series 113: 119-124
  • Croll, Donald A.; Gaston, Anthony J.; Burger, Alan E.; Konnoff, Daniel (1992). "Foraging behavior and physiological adaptation for diving in Thick-billed Murres". Ecology. 73 (1): 344–356. doi:10.2307/1938746. JSTOR 1938746.
  • Evans, Peter, G.H & Kampp, K. (1991): Recent changes in Thick-billed Murre populations. In: Gaston, A.J & Elliot, R.D. (eds.): Studies of high-latitude seabirds: 2. Conservation biology of Thick-billed Murres in the Northwestern Atlantic. Canadian Wildlife Service Occasional Paper 69: 7–14.
  • Gaston, Anthony J (1984). "How to distinguish first-year murres, Uria spp., from older birds in winter". Canadian Field-Naturalist. 98: 52–55.
  • Gaston, Anthony J (1988). "The mystery of the murres: Thick-billed murres, Uria lomvia, in the Great Lakes region, 1890-1986". Canadian Field-Naturalist. 102: 705–711.
  • Gaston, Anthony J.; Nettleship, David N. (1981): The Thick-billed murres of Prince Leopold Island. Environment Canada, Ottawa. ISBN 0-660-10857-7
  • Gaston, Anthony J.; Jones, Ian L. (1998): The Auks: Alcidae. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-854032-9
  • Gaston, Anthony J. & Hipfner, J. Mark (2000): The Thick-billed Murre. The Birds of North America Inc., Philadelphia, PA. ISSN 1061-5466
  • Gaston, Anthony J.; Hipfner, J. Mark; Campbell, D. (2003). "Heat and mosquitoes cause breeding failures and adult mortality in an Arctic-nesting seabird". Ibis. 144 (2): 185–191. doi:10.1046/j.1474-919x.2002.00038.x.
  • Gaston, Anthony J.; Woo, Kerry; Hipfner, J. Mark (2003). "Trends in Forage Fish Populations in Northern Hudson Bay since 1981, as Determined from the Diet of Nestling Thick-Billed Murres Uria lomvia [English with French abstract]" (PDF). Arctic. 56 (3): 227–233. doi:10.14430/arctic618.
  • Gaston, Anthony J.; Gilchrist, H.G.; Hipfner, J. Mark (2005). "Climate change, ice conditions and reproduction in an Arctic nesting marine bird: Brunnich's guillemot (Uria lomvia L.)". Journal of Animal Ecology. 74 (5): 832–841. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2005.00982.x.
  • Harrison, Peter (1988): Seabirds (2nd ed.). Christopher Helm, London. ISBN 0-7470-1410-8
  • Lilliendahl, K.; Solmundsson, J.; Gudmundsson, G.A. & Taylor, L. (2003): Can surveillance radar be used to monitor the foraging distribution of colonially breeding alcids? [English with Spanish abstract] Condor 105(1): 145–150. DOI: 10.1650/0010-5422(2003)105[145:CSRBUT]2.0.CO;2 HTML abstract
  • National Geographic Society (2002): Field Guide to the Birds of North America. National Geographic, Washington DC. ISBN 0-7922-6877-6
  • Nettleship, David N. (1996): 3. Thick-billed Murre. In: del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (eds.) (1996), Handbook of Birds of the World (Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks): 710–711, plate 59. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
  • Parmesan, Camille (2006). (PDF). Annu. Rev. Ecol. Evol. Syst. 37: 637–669. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.37.091305.110100. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-01-05.
  • Sibley, David Allen (2000): The Sibley Guide to Birds. Alfred A. Knopf, New York. ISBN 0-679-45122-6
  • Wiese Francis, K.; Robertson Greg, J.; Gaston Anthony, J. (2003). "Impact of chronic oil pollution and the murre hunt in Newfoundland on the Thick-billed Murre Uria lomvia populations in the eastern Canadian Arctic". Biological Conservation. 116 (2): 205–216. doi:10.1016/s0006-3207(03)00191-5.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Uria lomvia at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Uria lomvia at Wikispecies

thick, billed, murre, thick, billed, murre, brünnich, guillemot, uria, lomvia, bird, family, alcidae, this, bird, named, after, danish, zoologist, morten, thrane, brünnich, very, deeply, black, north, pacific, subspecies, uria, lomvia, arra, also, called, pall. The thick billed murre or Brunnich s guillemot Uria lomvia is a bird in the auk family Alcidae This bird is named after the Danish zoologist Morten Thrane Brunnich The very deeply black North Pacific subspecies Uria lomvia arra is also called Pallas murre after its describer The genus name is from Ancient Greek ouria a waterbird mentioned by Athenaeus The species term lomvia is a Swedish word for an auk or diver 2 The English guillemot is from French guillemot probably derived from Guillaume William 3 Murre is of uncertain origins but may imitate the call of the common guillemot 4 Thick billed murre Adults in breeding plumage Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Charadriiformes Family Alcidae Genus Uria Species U lomvia Binomial name Uria lomvia Linnaeus 1758 Subspecies Uria lomvia lomvia Linnaeus 1758 U l eleonorae Portenko 1937 Uria lomvia heckeri Portenko 1944 U l arra Pallas 1811 Synonyms Alca lomvia Linnaeus 1758 Murres have the highest flight cost for their body size of any animal 5 Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution 3 Habitat 4 Breeding 5 Migratory patterns 6 Flight and feeding characteristics 7 Trophic linkages 8 Status and conservation 9 As a vagrant 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksDescription edit nbsp Head color in breeding plumage is identical in all Brunnich s guillemots Since the extinction of the great auk in the mid 19th century the murres are the largest living members of the Alcidae 6 The thick billed murre and the closely related common guillemot or common murre U aalge are similarly sized but the thick billed still bests the other species in both average and maximum size The thick billed murre measures 40 48 cm 16 19 in in total length spans 64 81 cm 25 32 in across the wings and weighs 736 1 481 g 26 0 52 2 oz 7 8 9 The Pacific race U l arra is larger than the Atlantic race especially in bill dimensions 10 Adult birds are black on the head neck back and wings with white underparts The bill is long and pointed They have a small rounded black tail The lower face becomes white in winter This species produces a variety of harsh cackling calls at the breeding colonies but is silent at sea They differ from the common murre in their thicker shorter bill with white gape stripe and their darker head and back the bridled morph is unknown in U lomvia a murre has either a white eye stripe or a white bill stripe or neither but never both it may be that this is character displacement enabling individual birds to recognize conspecifics at a distance in the densely packed breeding colonies as the bridled morph is most common by far in North Atlantic colonies where both species of guillemots breed In winter there is less white on the thick billed murre s face They look shorter than the common murre in flight First year birds have smaller bills than adults and the white line on the bill is often obscure making the bill an unreliable way to identify them at this age The head pattern is the best way to distinguish first year birds from common murres 11 Distribution edit nbsp Adult and chick Buldir Island Alaska The thick billed murre is distributed across the polar and sub polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere where four subspecies exist one lives on the Atlantic and Arctic oceans of North America U l lomvia another on the Pacific coast of North America U l arra and two others that inhabit the Russian arctic U l eleonorae and U heckeri 12 13 Habitat editThick billed murres spend all of their lives at sea in waters which remain below 8 C 12 except during the breeding season where they form dense colonies on cliffs 12 13 Breeding edit nbsp Breeding colony at Stappen Bear Island Note bill stripes visible at a distance nbsp Egg Collection Museum Wiesbaden Thick billed murres form vast breeding colonies sometimes composed of over a million breeding birds on narrow ledges and steep cliffs which face the water 13 They have the smallest territory of any bird 13 requiring less than one square foot per individual 12 A breeding pair will lay a single egg each year 12 14 Despite this they are one of the most abundant marine birds in the Northern Hemisphere 13 Adults perform communal displays early in the breeding season to time their breeding cycles 12 They do not build nests but lay the egg directly on bare rock 12 Both parents are involved in incubating the egg and raising the young 15 16 Due to the enormous amount of energy needed to take off in flight adults can only provide one food item at a time to their chick 13 Chicks spend between 18 and 25 days on the cliffs before leaving for the sea 12 13 Once ready to leave the young will await nightfall and jump off the edge towards the water 13 A parent immediately jumps after and glides within centimeters of the fledgling 15 At sea the male and the chick stay together for around 8 weeks during which the adult continues to provide food for the young 13 Survival rates of the young is not based on the number of individuals in the colony but rather on the age of the breeders within the colony 12 Offspring of inexperienced pairs grow more slowly than those of experienced breeders possibly because they do not receive as much food from their parents 14 Also pairs which contain at least one young breeding bird tend to have lower hatch rates 17 Older and experienced adults obtain the better nesting sites located in the center of the colony while the inexperienced individuals are kept on the margins 12 where their young are more likely to be preyed upon 18 Migratory patterns editThey move south in winter into northernmost areas of the north Atlantic and Pacific but only to keep in ice free waters Flight and feeding characteristics edit nbsp Vagrant adult in winter plumage northern South Carolina nbsp Thick billed murres in Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge The thick billed murre s flight is strong and direct and they have fast wing beats due to the short wings Like the other auks these birds forage for food by using their wings to swim underwater 12 They are accomplished divers reaching depths of up to 150 m and diving for up to four minutes at a time usually however birds make either shallow short dives or dive down to 21 40 m for longer periods 19 While hunting the diving trajectory resembles a flattened U 19 Birds will make long trips to get to favorite feeding grounds while they usually forage several dozen km from their nest sites they often travel more than 100 km to fish 20 6 The strong and direct flight of murres which is for their body size the most costly form of sustained locomotion of any animal is a result of their short wingspan 5 The diving depths and durations regularly achieved by these birds indicate that they and similar auks have some as yet unknown mechanism to avoid diving sickness and lung collapse when surfacing 19 It is postulated that auks temporarily absorb excess gases into the vascular structure of their bones From there it is gradually released from temporary storage in a controlled process of decompression Trophic linkages editThe nominate race feeds primarily on fish such as Gadus spp and Arctic cod Boreogadus saida 12 as well as the pelagic amphipod Parathemisto libellula 13 Other fish such as capelin Mallotus villosus and Myoxocephalus spp as well as other crustaceans polychaetes and a few molluscs are found in their diet but in relatively low numbers 12 When wintering near Newfoundland capelin can account for over 90 percent of their diet 12 Thick billed murres have few natural predators because the immense number of concentrated birds found on the breeding colonies and the inaccessibility of these breeding sites make it extremely difficult for them to be preyed upon 12 Their main predator is the glaucous gull Larus hyperboreus and these feed exclusively on eggs and chicks 15 18 The common raven Corvus corax may also try to obtain eggs and hatchlings when they are left unattended 12 21 Status and conservation editAlthough declines have been observed in many parts of their range 12 the thick billed murre is not a species of concern as the total population is estimated to contain between 15 and 20 million individuals worldwide 13 nbsp Group on rocks Alaska Egg harvesting and hunting of adult birds are major threats in Greenland where populations fell steeply between the 1960s and 1980s 22 In the Barents Sea region the species has declined locally due to influences associated with polar stations in Russia Fisheries may also be a threat but because thick billed murres are better able to use alternative food sources the effect of over fishing is not as severe as on the common murre Pollution from oil at sea exerts another major threat Murres are among the seabirds most sensitive to oil contamination 23 Incidental mortality brought on by entanglement with fishing gear is also an important cause of population decline 24 Thick billed murres are closely associated with sea ice throughout the year 13 Consequently some scientists believe that climate change may be a threat to this Arctic breeding species 25 However the species seems adaptable Populations at the southern edge of their range switched from feeding on ice associated Arctic cod to warmer water capelin 26 as ice break up became earlier Dates for egg laying advanced with the earlier disappearance of ice The growth of chicks is slower in years when ice break up is early relative to egg laying by the murres In extremely warm years mosquitoes and heat kill some breeders 27 As a vagrant editBrunnich s guillemot is a rare vagrant in European countries south of the breeding range In Britain over 30 individuals have been recorded but over half of these were tideline corpses Of those that were seen alive only three have remained long enough to be seen by large numbers of observers All three were in Shetland winter individuals in February 1987 and November December 2005 and a bird in an auk colony in summer 1989 The 1989 and 2005 birds were both found by the same observer Martin Heubeck The species has been recorded once in Ireland 28 and has also been recorded in the Netherlands In the western Atlantic they may range as far as Florida 29 and in the Pacific to California 6 Before 1950 large numbers appeared on the North American Great Lakes in early winter passing up the St Lawrence River from the East coast Such irruptions have not been seen since 1952 30 Notes edit BirdLife International 2018 Uria lomvia IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22694847A132066134 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22694847A132066134 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 229 396 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Guillemot Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Murre Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b Elliott KH Ricklefs RE Gaston AJ Hatch SA Speakman JR Davoren GK 2013 High flight costs and low dive costs support the biomechanical hypothesis for flightlessness in penguins PNAS 110 23 9380 9384 doi 10 1073 pnas 1304838110 PMC 3677478 PMID 23690614 a b c Nettleship 1996 Thick billed Murre Life History All About Birds Cornell Lab of Ornithology Birds Arctic Watch Archived from the original on 2016 03 23 Retrieved 19 Jun 2023 Detail Page Gulf of Maine Census Gaston amp Jones 1998 Gaston 1984 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Tuck LM 1960 The Murres their distribution populations and biology A study of the genus Uria Ottawa Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources National Parks Branch Canadian Wildlife Service a b c d e f g h i j k l Gaston AJ Hipfner JM 2000 Thick billed Murre Uria lomvia The Birds of North America Online A Poole Ed Ithaca Cornell Lab of Ornithology Retrieved from the Birds of North America Online http bna birds cornell edu bna species 497doi 10 2173 bna 497 a b Hipfner JM Gaston AJ 2002 Growth of nestling Thick billed Murres Uria lomvia in relation to parental experience and hatching date Auk 119 3 827 832 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2002 119 0827 gontbm 2 0 co 2 S2CID 85710661 a b c Gaston AJ Nettleship DN 1981 The Thick billed Murres of Prince Leopold Island A study of the breeding ecology of a colonial high Arctic seabird Ottawa Environment Canada Canadian Wildlife Service Paredes R Jones IL Boness DJ 2006 Parental roles of male and female Thick billed Murres and Razorbills at the Gannet Islands Labrador Behaviour 143 4 451 481 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 523 583 doi 10 1163 156853906776240641 DeForest LN Gaston AJ 1996 The effect of age on timing of breeding and reproductive success in the Thick billed Murre Ecology 77 5 1501 1511 doi 10 2307 2265547 JSTOR 2265547 a b Gilchrist HG Gaston AJ 1997 Effects of Murre nest site characteristics and wind conditions on predation by Glaucous Gulls Canadian Journal of Zoology 75 4 518 524 doi 10 1139 z97 064 a b c Croll DA Gaston AJ Burger AE Konnoff D 1992 Foraging behavior and physiological adaptation for diving in Thick billed Murres Ecology 73 1 344 356 doi 10 2307 1938746 JSTOR 1938746 Lilliendahl et al 2003 Lepage D Nettleship DN Reed A 1998 Birds of Bylot Island and adjacent Baffin Island Northwest Territories Canada 1979 to 1997 Arctic 51 2 125 141 doi 10 14430 arctic1054 Evans and Kampp 1991 Wiese et al 2003 Bakken amp Pokrovskaya 2000 Gaston et al 2005 Gaston et al 2003 Gaston et al 2002 Parmesan 2006 Brunnich s Guillemot in County Wexford an addition to the Irish list Irish Birds 3 601 605 1988 Mullarney Killian 1998 First record of the Thick billed Murre from Florida Florida Field Naturalist 3 88 89 Gaston 1988 References editBakken Vidar amp Pokrovskaya Irina V 2000 Brunnich s Guillemot In Anker Nilssen T Bakken Vidar Strom H Golovkin A N Bianki V V amp Tatarinkova I P eds The status of marine birds breeding in the Barents sea region Norwegian Polar Institute Report Series 113 119 124 Croll Donald A Gaston Anthony J Burger Alan E Konnoff Daniel 1992 Foraging behavior and physiological adaptation for diving in Thick billed Murres Ecology 73 1 344 356 doi 10 2307 1938746 JSTOR 1938746 Evans Peter G H amp Kampp K 1991 Recent changes in Thick billed Murre populations In Gaston A J amp Elliot R D eds Studies of high latitude seabirds 2 Conservation biology of Thick billed Murres in the Northwestern Atlantic Canadian Wildlife Service Occasional Paper 69 7 14 Gaston Anthony J 1984 How to distinguish first year murres Uria spp from older birds in winter Canadian Field Naturalist 98 52 55 Gaston Anthony J 1988 The mystery of the murres Thick billed murres Uria lomvia in the Great Lakes region 1890 1986 Canadian Field Naturalist 102 705 711 Gaston Anthony J Nettleship David N 1981 The Thick billed murres of Prince Leopold Island Environment Canada Ottawa ISBN 0 660 10857 7 Gaston Anthony J Jones Ian L 1998 The Auks Alcidae Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 854032 9 Gaston Anthony J amp Hipfner J Mark 2000 The Thick billed Murre The Birds of North America Inc Philadelphia PA ISSN 1061 5466 Gaston Anthony J Hipfner J Mark Campbell D 2003 Heat and mosquitoes cause breeding failures and adult mortality in an Arctic nesting seabird Ibis 144 2 185 191 doi 10 1046 j 1474 919x 2002 00038 x Gaston Anthony J Woo Kerry Hipfner J Mark 2003 Trends in Forage Fish Populations in Northern Hudson Bay since 1981 as Determined from the Diet of Nestling Thick Billed Murres Uria lomvia English with French abstract PDF Arctic 56 3 227 233 doi 10 14430 arctic618 Gaston Anthony J Gilchrist H G Hipfner J Mark 2005 Climate change ice conditions and reproduction in an Arctic nesting marine bird Brunnich s guillemot Uria lomvia L Journal of Animal Ecology 74 5 832 841 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2656 2005 00982 x Harrison Peter 1988 Seabirds 2nd ed Christopher Helm London ISBN 0 7470 1410 8 Lilliendahl K Solmundsson J Gudmundsson G A amp Taylor L 2003 Can surveillance radar be used to monitor the foraging distribution of colonially breeding alcids English with Spanish abstract Condor 105 1 145 150 DOI 10 1650 0010 5422 2003 105 145 CSRBUT 2 0 CO 2 HTML abstract National Geographic Society 2002 Field Guide to the Birds of North America National Geographic Washington DC ISBN 0 7922 6877 6 Nettleship David N 1996 3 Thick billed Murre In del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew amp Sargatal Jordi eds 1996 Handbook of Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzin to Auks 710 711 plate 59 Lynx Edicions Barcelona ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Parmesan Camille 2006 Ecological and Evolutionary Responses to Recent Climate Change PDF Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst 37 637 669 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 37 091305 110100 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 01 05 Sibley David Allen 2000 The Sibley Guide to Birds Alfred A Knopf New York ISBN 0 679 45122 6 Wiese Francis K Robertson Greg J Gaston Anthony J 2003 Impact of chronic oil pollution and the murre hunt in Newfoundland on the Thick billed Murre Uria lomvia populations in the eastern Canadian Arctic Biological Conservation 116 2 205 216 doi 10 1016 s0006 3207 03 00191 5 External links edit nbsp Media related to Uria lomvia at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Uria lomvia at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thick billed murre amp oldid 1221019654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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