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Common murre

The common murre or common guillemot (Uria aalge) is a large auk. It has a circumpolar distribution, occurring in low-Arctic and boreal waters in the North Atlantic and North Pacific. It spends most of its time at sea, only coming to land to breed on rocky cliff shores or islands.

Common murre
Bird calls recorded in Pembrokeshire, Wales
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Alcidae
Genus: Uria
Species:
U. aalge
Binomial name
Uria aalge
(Pontoppidan, 1763)
Synonyms
  • Colymbus aalge Pontoppidan, 1763
  • Colymbus troile Linnaeus, 1766
  • Uria troile Linnaeus[2]

Common murres have fast direct flight but are not very agile. They are more maneuverable underwater, typically diving to depths of 30–60 m (100–195 ft). Depths of up to 180 m (590 ft) have been recorded.

Common murres breed in colonies at high densities. Nesting pairs may be in bodily contact with their neighbours. They make no nest; their single egg is incubated on a bare rock ledge on a cliff face. Eggs hatch after ~30 days incubation. The chick is born downy and can regulate its body temperature after 10 days. Some 20 days after hatching the chick leaves its nesting ledge and heads for the sea, unable to fly, but gliding for some distance with fluttering wings, accompanied by its male parent.[3] Male guillemots spend more time diving, and dive more deeply than females during this time.[4] Chicks are capable of diving as soon as they hit the water. The female stays at the nest site for some 14 days after the chick has left.

Both male and female common murres moult after breeding and become flightless for 1–2 months. In some populations they occasionally return to the nest site throughout the winter. Adult birds reduce the time that they spend flying during the winter and are able to forage nocturnally.[5]

Taxonomy

The auks are a family of seabirds related to the gulls and terns which contains several genera. The common murre is placed in the guillemot (murre) genus Uria (Brisson, 1760), which it shares with the thick-billed murre or Brunnich's guillemot, U. lomvia. These species, together with the razorbill, little auk and the extinct great auk make up the tribe Alcini. This arrangement was originally based on analyses of auk morphology and ecology.[6]

The binomial name derives from Greek ouriaa, a waterbird mentioned by Athenaeus, and Danish aalge, "auk" (from Old Norse alka).[7]

The English "guillemot" is from French guillemot, probably derived from Guillaume, "William".[8] "Murre" is of uncertain origins, but may imitate the call of the common guillemot.[9]

The official common name for this species is Common Murre according to the IOC World Bird List, Version 11.2.[10] Unofficial names include common guillemot, used in the UK.[11]

Description

The common murre is 38–46 cm (15–18 in) in length with a 61–73 cm (24–29 in) wingspan.[12] Male and female are indistinguishable in the field and weight ranges between 945 g (2 lb 1+12 oz) in the south of their range to 1,044 g (2 lb 5 oz) in the north.[13] A weight range of 775–1,250 g (1 lb 11+12 oz – 2 lb 12 oz) has been reported.[14] In breeding plumage, the nominate subspecies (U. a. aalge) is black on the head, back and wings, and has white underparts. It has thin dark pointed bill and a small rounded dark tail. After the pre-basic moult, the face is white with a dark spur behind the eye. Birds of the subspecies U. a. albionis are dark brown rather than black, most obviously so in colonies in southern Britain. Legs are grey and the bill is dark grey. Occasionally, adults are seen with yellow/grey legs. In May 2008, an aberrant adult was photographed with a bright yellow bill.[15]

The plumage of first winter birds is the same as the adult basic plumage. However, the first pre-alternate moult occurs later in the year. The adult pre-alternate moult is December–February, (even starting as early as November in U. a. albionis). First year birds can be in basic plumage as late as May, and their alternate plumage can retain some white feathers around the throat.[12]

Some individuals in the North Atlantic, known as "bridled guillemots", have a white ring around the eye extending back as a white line. This is not a distinct subspecies, but a polymorphism that becomes more common the farther north the birds breed—perhaps character displacement with the northerly thick-billed murre, which has a white bill-stripe but no bridled morph. The white is highly contrasting especially in the latter species and would provide an easy means for an individual bird to recognize conspecifics in densely packed breeding colonies.[16]

The chicks are downy with blackish feathers on top and white below. By 12 days old, contour feathers are well developed in areas except for the head. At 15 days, facial feathers show the dark eyestripe against the white throat and cheek.[17]

Flight

The common murre flies with fast wing beats and has a flight speed of 80 km/h (50 mph).[18] Groups of birds are often seen flying together in a line just above the sea surface.[12] However, a high wing loading of 2 g/cm2[19] means that this species is not very agile and take-off is difficult.[20] Common murres become flightless for 45–60 days while moulting their primary feathers.[21] The sound of the wing beats of the murres are often described as similar to a helicopter.

Diving

 
Skeleton

The common murre is a pursuit-diver that forages for food by swimming underwater using its wings for propulsion. Dives usually last less than one minute, but the bird swims underwater for distances of over 30 m (100 ft) on a regular basis. Diving depths up to 180 m (590 ft) have been recorded[22] and birds can remain underwater for a couple of minutes.

Distribution and habitat

The breeding habitat is islands, rocky shores, cliffs and sea stacks. The population is large, perhaps 7.3 million breeding pairs [23] or 18 million individuals.[1] It had been stable, but in 2016 a massive die-off of the birds in the northeast Pacific was reported. The birds seem emaciated and starving; no etiology has been found.[24] In general, potential threats include excessive hunting (legal in Newfoundland), pollution and oil spills. Cape Meares, Oregon is home to one of the most populous colonies of nesting common murres on the North American continent.[25]

Some birds are permanent residents; northern birds migrate south to open waters near New England, southern California, Japan, Korea and the western Mediterranean. UK populations are generally distributed near their breeding colonies year-round, but have been found to make long-distance migrations as far north as the Barents Sea.[26] Common murres rest on the water in the winter and this may have consequences for their metabolism. In the black-legged kittiwake (which shares this winter habit) resting metabolism is 40% higher on water than it is in air.[27]

Subspecies[28] Range Appearance
Uria aalge aalge Nominate subspecies, eastern Canada, Greenland, Iceland, northern Ireland and Britain, southern Norway, possibly New England or a separate subspecies.
U. a. albionis Southern Ireland and Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal Smaller than nominate, chocolate brown upperparts
U. a. hyperborea Northern Norway, Northwest Russia, Barents Sea Larger than U. a. aalge, black upperparts
U. a. intermedia Baltic Sea Intermediate between U. a. aalge and U. a. albionis
U. a. spiloptera Faroe Islands
U. a. inornata North Pacific, Japan, Eastern Russia, Alaska Largest subspecies and largest auk, slightly larger than thick-billed murre
U. a. californica California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia
Swimming in a Tokyo aquarium

Ecology and behaviour

Feeding

The common murre can venture far from its breeding grounds to forage; distances of 100 km (60 mi) and more are often observed[29] though if sufficient food is available closer by, birds only travel much shorter distances. The common murre mainly eats small schooling forage fish 200 mm (8 in) long or less, such as polar cod, capelin, sand lances, sprats, sandeels, Atlantic cod and Atlantic herring. Capelin and sand lances are favourite food, but what the main prey is at any one time depends much on what is available in quantity.[29] It also eats some molluscs, marine worms, squid, and crustaceans such as amphipods. It consumes 20–32 g (11161+18 oz) of food in a day on average. It is often seen carrying fish in its bill with the tail hanging out.[16]

The snake pipefish is occasionally eaten, but it has poor nutritional value. The amount of these fish is increasing in the common murre's diet. Since 2003, the snake pipefish has increased in numbers in the North-east Atlantic and North Sea and sandeel numbers have declined.[30]

Communication

The common murre has a variety of calls, including a soft purring noise.

Reproduction

Colonies

 
Part of a U. a. californica colony, Farallon Islands, California

The common murre nests in densely packed colonies (known as "loomeries"), with up to twenty pairs occupying one square metre at peak season.[citation needed] Common murres do not make nests and lay their eggs on bare rock ledges, under rocks, or the ground. Despite the high density of murre breeding sites, sites may vary greatly in their quality over small spatial scales. Pairs breeding at those sites of highest quality are more likely to be occupied by a breeding pairs at all population sizes, and more likely to successfully fledge a chick.[31] They first breed at four to nine years old,[32] but most individuals recruit into the breeding population at ages six or seven,[32] although birds may disperse (permanently depart their natal colony) if space is limited. Annual survival probability for birds aged 6–15 is 0.895,[32] and average lifespan is about 20 years. Breeding success increases with age up to age 9–10 to 0.7 fledglings per pair, then declines in the oldest age birds, perhaps indicating reproductive senescence.[32]

High densities mean that birds are close contact with neighbouring breeders.[33] Common murres perform appeasement displays more often at high densities and more often than razorbills.[33] Allopreening is common both between mates and between neighbours. Allopreening helps to reduce parasites, and it may also have important social functions.[34] Frequency of allopreening a neighbour correlates well with current breeding success.[34] Allopreening may function as a stress-reducer; ledges with low levels of allopreening show increased levels of fighting and reduced breeding success.[34]

Courtship

Courtship displays including bowing, billing and mutual preening. The male points its head vertically and makes croaking and growling noises to attract the females. The species is monogamous, but pairs may split if breeding is unsuccessful.[35][36]

Eggs and incubation

 
Murre eggs

Common murre eggs are large (around 11% of female weight[28]), and are pointed at one end. The egg's pyriform shape is popularly ascribed the function of allowing the egg to spin on its axis or in an arc when disturbed, however there is no evidence to support this claim.[37] Various hypotheses have arisen to explain the egg's shape:

  1. Pyriform eggs are more stable on a sloping surface than more elliptical eggs, such as that of the razorbill.[37]
  2. The shape allows efficient heat transfer during incubation.[38]
  3. As a compromise between large egg size and small cross-section. Large size allows quick development of the chick. Small cross-sectional area allows the adult bird to have a small cross-section and therefore reduce drag when swimming.[28]
  4. Due to its pyriform shape, a higher proportion of the eggshell is in contact with the cliff minimising the effects of impact by neighbouring birds.
  5. It helps to confine faecal contamination to the pointy end of the egg. The blunt end, where the embryo's head and air cell are located, is kept relatively free of debris, allowing gases to pass through the shell unimpeded;.[39][37]

Eggs are laid between May and July for the Atlantic populations and March to July for those in the Pacific. The female spends less time ashore during the two weeks before laying. When laying, she assumes a "phoenix-like" posture: her body raised upright on vertical tarsi; wings half outstretched. The egg emerges point first and laying usually takes 5–10 minutes.[40]

Herring gull steals an egg, Lundy

The eggs vary in colour and pattern to help the parents recognize them, each egg's pattern being unique.[41] Colours include white, green, blue or brown with spots or speckles in black or lilac. After laying, the female will look at the egg before starting the first incubation shift.[40] Both parents incubate the egg using a single, centrally located brood patch for the 28 to 34 days to hatching in shifts of 1–38 hours.[28]

Eggs can be lost due to predation or carelessness. Crows and gulls are opportunist egg thieves. Eggs are also knocked from ledges during fights. If the first egg is lost, the female may lay a second egg. This egg is usually lighter than the first, with a lighter yolk.[citation needed] Chicks from second eggs grow quicker than those from first eggs. However this rapid growth comes at a cost, first chicks have larger fat reserves and can withstand temporary shortages of food.[citation needed]

Growth of the chick

Chicks occupy an intermediate position between the precocial chicks of genus Synthliboramphus and the semi-precocial chicks of the Atlantic puffin.[42] They are born downy and by 10 days old they are able to regulate their own temperature.[17] Except in times of food shortage there is at least one parent present at all times, and both parents are present 10–30% of the time.[43] Both parents alternate between brooding the chick or foraging for food.

Adults feeding chick, Lundy

Provisioning is usually divided equally between each parent, but unequal provisioning effort can lead to divorce.[36] Common murres are single-prey loaders, this means that they carry one fish at time. The fish is held lengthways in the adult's bill, with the fish's tail hanging from the end of the beak. The returning adult will form its wings into a 'tent' to protect the chick. The adult points its head downwards and the chick swallows the fish head first.

Alloparenting behaviour is frequently observed. Non-breeding and failed breeders show great interest in other chicks, and will attempt to brood or feed them. This activity is more common as the chicks get older and begin to explore their ledge. There has also been a record of a pair managing to raise two chicks.[44] Adults that have lost chicks or eggs will sometimes bring fish to the nest site and try to feed their imaginary chick.

At time of extreme food stress, the social activity of the breeding ledge can break down. On the Isle of May colony in 2007, food availability was low. Adults spent more of their time-budget foraging for their chicks and had to leave them unattended at times. Unattended chicks were attacked by breeding neighbour which often led to their deaths. Non-breeding and failed breeders continued to show alloparental care.[45]

 
Chick, Alaska

The chicks will leave the nest after 16 to 30 days (average 20–22 days),[13] and glide down into the sea, slowing their fall by fluttering as they are not yet able to fly. Chicks glide from heights as high as 457 m (1,499 ft) to the water below.[citation needed] Once the young chick has left the nest, the male is in close attendance for up to two months. The chicks are able to fly roughly two weeks after fledging. Up until then the male feeds and cares for the chick at sea. In its migration south the chick swims about 1,000 km (600 mi). The female remains at the nest site for up to 36 days after the chick has fledged (average 16 days).[46]

Relationship with humans

 
Common murre chick, Lundy
 
Breeding plumage
 
Common murre family

Pollution

Major oil spills double the winter mortality of breeding adults but appear to have little effect on birds less than three years old.[47] This loss of breeding birds can be compensated by increased recruitment of 4–6 year olds to breeding colonies.[47]

Recreational disturbance

Nesting common murres are prone to two main sources of recreational disturbance: rock-climbing and birdwatching. Sea cliffs are a paradise for climbers as well as birds; a small island like Lundy has over 1000 described climbing routes.[48] To minimise disturbance, some cliffs are subject to seasonal climbing bans.[48]

Birdwatching has conflicting effects on common murres. Birdwatchers petitioned the UK government to introduce the Sea Birds Preservation Act 1869. This act was designed to reduce the effects of shooting and egg collecting during the breeding season.[49] Current concerns include managing the effect of visitor numbers at wildlife reserves. Common murres have been shown to be sensitive to visitor numbers.[50]

Seabirds as indicators of marine health

When common murres are feeding their young, they return with one fish at a time. The provisioning time relates to the distance of the feeding areas from the colony and the numbers of available fish. There is a strong non-linear relationship between fish density and colony attendance during chick-rearing.[51]

As a food source

In areas such as Newfoundland and Labrador, the birds, along with the related thick-billed murre, are referred to as 'turrs' or 'tuirs', and are consumed. The meat is dark and quite oily, due to the birds' diet of fish. Eggs have also been harvested. Eggers from San Francisco took almost half a million eggs a year from the Farallon Islands in the mid-19th century to feed the growing city.[52]

Notes

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2018). "Uria aalge". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22694841A132577296. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22694841A132577296.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Uria aalge: Guillemot". National Biodiversity Network (NBN) Atlas. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  3. ^ Harris, M. P.; Wanless, S.; Barton, T. R.; Elston, D. A. (1997). "Nest site characteristics, duration of use and breeding success in the Guillemot Uria aalge". Ibis. 139 (3): 468–476. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919x.1997.tb04660.x. ISSN 0019-1019.
  4. ^ Dunn, Ruth E.; Wanless, Sarah; Green, Jonathan A.; Harris, Michael P.; Daunt, Francis (2019). "Effects of body size, sex, parental care and moult strategies on auk diving behaviour outside the breeding season". Journal of Avian Biology. 50 (7). doi:10.1111/jav.02012. ISSN 1600-048X. S2CID 164436494.
  5. ^ Dunn, Ruth E.; Wanless, Sarah; Daunt, Francis; Harris, Michael P.; Green, Jonathan A. (7 April 2020). "A year in the life of a North Atlantic seabird: behavioural and energetic adjustments during the annual cycle". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 5993. Bibcode:2020NatSR..10.5993D. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-62842-x. PMC 7138806. PMID 32265524.
  6. ^ Strauch (1985)
  7. ^ "Guillemot Uria aalge [Pontoppidan, 1763]". Bird facts. British Trust for Ornithology. Retrieved 20 August 2008.
  8. ^ "Guillemot". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. ^ "Murre". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  10. ^ Gill, Donsker & & Rasmussen (2021)
  11. ^ https://americanornithology.org/red-eggs/ |publisher=American Ornithological Society Retrieved 19 August 2021
  12. ^ a b c Mullarney et al. (1999)
  13. ^ a b Harris & Birkhead (1985)
  14. ^ CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses by John B. Dunning Jr. (Editor). CRC Press (1992), ISBN 978-0-8493-4258-5.
  15. ^ Blamire (2008)
  16. ^ a b Nettleship (1996)
  17. ^ a b Mahoney & Threlfall(1981)
  18. ^ Vaughn (1937)
  19. ^ Livezey (1988)
  20. ^ Bédard (1985)
  21. ^ Birkhead & Taylor (1977)
  22. ^ Piatt, John F.; Nettleship, David N. (April 1985). "Diving depths of four alcids" (PDF). The Auk. 102 (2): 293–297. doi:10.2307/4086771. JSTOR 4086771.
  23. ^ Mitchell et al. (2004)
  24. ^ A massive die-off
  25. ^ "Cape Meares State Scenic Viewpoint - Oregon State Parks and Recreation". oregonstateparks.org. Retrieved 2019-12-16.
  26. ^ Buckingham, Lila; Bogdanova, Maria I.; Green, Jonathan A.; Dunn, Ruth E.; Wanless, Sarah; Bennett, Sophie; Bevan, Richard M.; Call, Andrew; Canham, Michael; Corse, Colin J.; Harris, Michael P.; Heward, Christopher J.; Jardine, David C.; Lennon, Jim; Parnaby, David; Redfern, Chris P. F.; Scott, Liz; Swann, Robert L.; Ward, Robin M.; Weston, Ewan D.; Furness, Robert W.; Daunt, Francis (17 February 2022). "Interspecific variation in non-breeding aggregation: a multi-colony tracking study of two sympatric seabirds". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 684: 181–197. doi:10.3354/meps13960. S2CID 244752949.
  27. ^ Humphreys et al. (2007)
  28. ^ a b c d Gaston & Jones (1998)
  29. ^ a b Lilliendahl et al. (2003)
  30. ^ Harris et al. (2008)
  31. ^ Bennett, Sophie; Wanless, Sarah; Harris, Mike P.; Newell, Mark A.; Searle, Kate R.; Green, Jonathan A.; Daunt, Francis (2022). "Site-dependent regulation of breeding success: Evidence for the buffer effect in the common guillemot, a colonially breeding seabird". Journal of Animal Ecology. 91 (4): 0–14. doi:10.1111/1365-2656.13674. PMC 9305850. PMID 35157312. S2CID 246813729.
  32. ^ a b c d Lee, Derek E.; Abraham, Christine L.; Warzybok, Peter M.; Bradley, Russell W.; Sydeman, William J. (2008-04-01). "Age-Specific Survival, Breeding Success, and Recruitment in Common Murres (Uria Aalge) of the California Current System". The Auk. 125 (2): 316–325. doi:10.1525/auk.2008.07007. ISSN 0004-8038. S2CID 85018537.
  33. ^ a b Birkhead (1978)
  34. ^ a b c Lewis et al. (2007)
  35. ^ Kokko et al. (2004)
  36. ^ a b Moody et al. (2005)
  37. ^ a b c Birkhead, Tim R.; Thompson, Jamie E.; Montgomerie, Robert (1 October 2018). "The pyriform egg of the Common Murre (Uria aalge) is more stable on sloping surfacesEl huevo piriforme de Uria aalge es más estable en superficies inclinadasCommon Murre egg shape and stability". The Auk. 135 (4): 1020–1032. doi:10.1642/AUK-18-38.1.
  38. ^ Johnson (1941)
  39. ^ Birkhead, T. R.; Thompson, J. E.; Jackson, D.; Biggins, J. D. (2017). "The point of a Guillemot's egg" (PDF). Ibis. 159 (2): 255–265. doi:10.1111/ibi.12458.
  40. ^ a b Harris & Wanless (2006)
  41. ^ Birkhead, Tim (2016). The Most Perfect Thing: Inside (and Outside) a Bird's Egg. London: Bloomsbury. p. 117.
  42. ^ Gaston (1985)
  43. ^ Wanless et al. (2005)
  44. ^ Harris et al. (2000)
  45. ^ Ashbrook et al. (2008)
  46. ^ Harris & Wanless (2003)
  47. ^ a b Votier et al. (2008)
  48. ^ a b Harrison (2008)
  49. ^ Barclay-Smith (1959)
  50. ^ Beale (2007)
  51. ^ Harding et al. (2007)
  52. ^ White, Peter; (1995)

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  • Mitchell, P. Ian; Newton, Stephen F.; Ratcliffe, Norman & Dunn, Timothy E. (eds.) (2004): Seabird Populations of Britain and Ireland. Poyser, London. ISBN 0-7136-6901-2
  • Moody, Allison T.; Wilhelm, Sabina, I.; Cameron-MacMillan, Maureen L.; Walsh, Carolyn J.; Storey, Anne E. (2004). "Divorce in common murres (Uria aalge): relationship to parental quality". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 57 (3): 224. doi:10.1007/s00265-004-0856-8. S2CID 25443607.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Mullarney, Killian; Svensson, Lars; Zetterström, Dan & Grant, Peter J. (1999): Collins Bird Guide: 194–197 HarperCollins, London. ISBN 0-00-711332-3
  • 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): 2. Common Murre. In: del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (eds.) (1996), Handbook of Birds of the World (Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks): 709–710, plate 59. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
  • Nettleship, David, N. & Birkhead, Tim R. (eds.) (1985): The Atlantic Alcidae. Academic Press, London. ISBN 0-12-515671-5
  • Sibley, David Allen (2000): The Sibley Guide to Birds. Alfred A. Knopf, New York. ISBN 0-679-45122-6
  • Strauch, J.G. Jr. (1985). "The phylogeny of the Alcidae" (PDF). Auk. 102 (3): 520–539. doi:10.1093/auk/102.3.520. JSTOR 4086647.
  • Vaughn, H.R.H. (1937). "Flight speed of guillemots, razorbills and puffins" (PDF). British Birds. 31: 123.
  • Votier, S.C.; Birkhead, T.R.; Oro, D.; Trinder, M.; Grantham, M.J.; Clark, J.A.; McCleery, R.H. & Hatchwell, B.J. (2008). "Recruitment and survival of immature seabirds in relation to oil spills and climate variability". Journal of Animal Ecology. 77 (5): 974–983. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2008.01421.x. PMID 18624739.
  • Wanless, S.; Harris, M.P.; Redman, P.; Speakman, J.R. (2005). "Low energy values of fish as a probable cause of a major seabird breeding failure in the North Sea". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 294: 1–8. Bibcode:2005MEPS..294....1W. doi:10.3354/meps294001.
  • White, Peter; (1995), The Farallon Islands, Sentinels of the Golden Gate, Scottwall Associates:San Francisco, ISBN 0-942087-10-0

External links

  • The RSPB: Guillemot
  • Common Murre - Uria aalge - USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
  • Common Murre Restoration Project at San Francisco Bay NWR Complex
  • Sheila Blamire – Norway Wildlife 2 Includes her photograph of an aberrant common guillemot with a yellow bill.
  • "Common murre media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Common murre photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Interactive range map of Uria aalge at IUCN Red List maps

common, murre, common, murre, common, guillemot, uria, aalge, large, circumpolar, distribution, occurring, arctic, boreal, waters, north, atlantic, north, pacific, spends, most, time, only, coming, land, breed, rocky, cliff, shores, islands, source, source, bi. The common murre or common guillemot Uria aalge is a large auk It has a circumpolar distribution occurring in low Arctic and boreal waters in the North Atlantic and North Pacific It spends most of its time at sea only coming to land to breed on rocky cliff shores or islands Common murre source source Bird calls recorded in Pembrokeshire WalesConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder CharadriiformesFamily AlcidaeGenus UriaSpecies U aalgeBinomial nameUria aalge Pontoppidan 1763 SynonymsColymbus aalge Pontoppidan 1763 Colymbus troile Linnaeus 1766 Uria troile Linnaeus 2 Common murres have fast direct flight but are not very agile They are more maneuverable underwater typically diving to depths of 30 60 m 100 195 ft Depths of up to 180 m 590 ft have been recorded Common murres breed in colonies at high densities Nesting pairs may be in bodily contact with their neighbours They make no nest their single egg is incubated on a bare rock ledge on a cliff face Eggs hatch after 30 days incubation The chick is born downy and can regulate its body temperature after 10 days Some 20 days after hatching the chick leaves its nesting ledge and heads for the sea unable to fly but gliding for some distance with fluttering wings accompanied by its male parent 3 Male guillemots spend more time diving and dive more deeply than females during this time 4 Chicks are capable of diving as soon as they hit the water The female stays at the nest site for some 14 days after the chick has left Both male and female common murres moult after breeding and become flightless for 1 2 months In some populations they occasionally return to the nest site throughout the winter Adult birds reduce the time that they spend flying during the winter and are able to forage nocturnally 5 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Flight 2 2 Diving 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology and behaviour 4 1 Feeding 4 2 Communication 4 3 Reproduction 4 3 1 Colonies 4 3 2 Courtship 4 3 3 Eggs and incubation 4 3 4 Growth of the chick 5 Relationship with humans 5 1 Pollution 5 2 Recreational disturbance 5 3 Seabirds as indicators of marine health 5 4 As a food source 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy EditThe auks are a family of seabirds related to the gulls and terns which contains several genera The common murre is placed in the guillemot murre genus Uria Brisson 1760 which it shares with the thick billed murre or Brunnich s guillemot U lomvia These species together with the razorbill little auk and the extinct great auk make up the tribe Alcini This arrangement was originally based on analyses of auk morphology and ecology 6 The binomial name derives from Greek ouriaa a waterbird mentioned by Athenaeus and Danish aalge auk from Old Norse alka 7 The English guillemot is from French guillemot probably derived from Guillaume William 8 Murre is of uncertain origins but may imitate the call of the common guillemot 9 The official common name for this species is Common Murre according to the IOC World Bird List Version 11 2 10 Unofficial names include common guillemot used in the UK 11 Description EditThe common murre is 38 46 cm 15 18 in in length with a 61 73 cm 24 29 in wingspan 12 Male and female are indistinguishable in the field and weight ranges between 945 g 2 lb 1 1 2 oz in the south of their range to 1 044 g 2 lb 5 oz in the north 13 A weight range of 775 1 250 g 1 lb 11 1 2 oz 2 lb 12 oz has been reported 14 In breeding plumage the nominate subspecies U a aalge is black on the head back and wings and has white underparts It has thin dark pointed bill and a small rounded dark tail After the pre basic moult the face is white with a dark spur behind the eye Birds of the subspecies U a albionis are dark brown rather than black most obviously so in colonies in southern Britain Legs are grey and the bill is dark grey Occasionally adults are seen with yellow grey legs In May 2008 an aberrant adult was photographed with a bright yellow bill 15 The plumage of first winter birds is the same as the adult basic plumage However the first pre alternate moult occurs later in the year The adult pre alternate moult is December February even starting as early as November in U a albionis First year birds can be in basic plumage as late as May and their alternate plumage can retain some white feathers around the throat 12 Some individuals in the North Atlantic known as bridled guillemots have a white ring around the eye extending back as a white line This is not a distinct subspecies but a polymorphism that becomes more common the farther north the birds breed perhaps character displacement with the northerly thick billed murre which has a white bill stripe but no bridled morph The white is highly contrasting especially in the latter species and would provide an easy means for an individual bird to recognize conspecifics in densely packed breeding colonies 16 The chicks are downy with blackish feathers on top and white below By 12 days old contour feathers are well developed in areas except for the head At 15 days facial feathers show the dark eyestripe against the white throat and cheek 17 Adult in basic winter plumage Germany in flight off Skomer Island Bridled mature bird white eye ring Flight Edit The common murre flies with fast wing beats and has a flight speed of 80 km h 50 mph 18 Groups of birds are often seen flying together in a line just above the sea surface 12 However a high wing loading of 2 g cm2 19 means that this species is not very agile and take off is difficult 20 Common murres become flightless for 45 60 days while moulting their primary feathers 21 The sound of the wing beats of the murres are often described as similar to a helicopter Diving Edit Skeleton The common murre is a pursuit diver that forages for food by swimming underwater using its wings for propulsion Dives usually last less than one minute but the bird swims underwater for distances of over 30 m 100 ft on a regular basis Diving depths up to 180 m 590 ft have been recorded 22 and birds can remain underwater for a couple of minutes Distribution and habitat EditThe breeding habitat is islands rocky shores cliffs and sea stacks The population is large perhaps 7 3 million breeding pairs 23 or 18 million individuals 1 It had been stable but in 2016 a massive die off of the birds in the northeast Pacific was reported The birds seem emaciated and starving no etiology has been found 24 In general potential threats include excessive hunting legal in Newfoundland pollution and oil spills Cape Meares Oregon is home to one of the most populous colonies of nesting common murres on the North American continent 25 Some birds are permanent residents northern birds migrate south to open waters near New England southern California Japan Korea and the western Mediterranean UK populations are generally distributed near their breeding colonies year round but have been found to make long distance migrations as far north as the Barents Sea 26 Common murres rest on the water in the winter and this may have consequences for their metabolism In the black legged kittiwake which shares this winter habit resting metabolism is 40 higher on water than it is in air 27 Subspecies 28 Range AppearanceUria aalge aalge Nominate subspecies eastern Canada Greenland Iceland northern Ireland and Britain southern Norway possibly New England or a separate subspecies U a albionis Southern Ireland and Britain France Germany Spain Portugal Smaller than nominate chocolate brown upperpartsU a hyperborea Northern Norway Northwest Russia Barents Sea Larger than U a aalge black upperpartsU a intermedia Baltic Sea Intermediate between U a aalge and U a albionisU a spiloptera Faroe IslandsU a inornata North Pacific Japan Eastern Russia Alaska Largest subspecies and largest auk slightly larger than thick billed murreU a californica California Oregon Washington British Columbia source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Swimming in a Tokyo aquariumEcology and behaviour EditFeeding Edit The common murre can venture far from its breeding grounds to forage distances of 100 km 60 mi and more are often observed 29 though if sufficient food is available closer by birds only travel much shorter distances The common murre mainly eats small schooling forage fish 200 mm 8 in long or less such as polar cod capelin sand lances sprats sandeels Atlantic cod and Atlantic herring Capelin and sand lances are favourite food but what the main prey is at any one time depends much on what is available in quantity 29 It also eats some molluscs marine worms squid and crustaceans such as amphipods It consumes 20 32 g 11 16 1 1 8 oz of food in a day on average It is often seen carrying fish in its bill with the tail hanging out 16 The snake pipefish is occasionally eaten but it has poor nutritional value The amount of these fish is increasing in the common murre s diet Since 2003 the snake pipefish has increased in numbers in the North east Atlantic and North Sea and sandeel numbers have declined 30 Communication Edit The common murre has a variety of calls including a soft purring noise Reproduction Edit Colonies Edit Part of a U a californica colony Farallon Islands California The common murre nests in densely packed colonies known as loomeries with up to twenty pairs occupying one square metre at peak season citation needed Common murres do not make nests and lay their eggs on bare rock ledges under rocks or the ground Despite the high density of murre breeding sites sites may vary greatly in their quality over small spatial scales Pairs breeding at those sites of highest quality are more likely to be occupied by a breeding pairs at all population sizes and more likely to successfully fledge a chick 31 They first breed at four to nine years old 32 but most individuals recruit into the breeding population at ages six or seven 32 although birds may disperse permanently depart their natal colony if space is limited Annual survival probability for birds aged 6 15 is 0 895 32 and average lifespan is about 20 years Breeding success increases with age up to age 9 10 to 0 7 fledglings per pair then declines in the oldest age birds perhaps indicating reproductive senescence 32 High densities mean that birds are close contact with neighbouring breeders 33 Common murres perform appeasement displays more often at high densities and more often than razorbills 33 Allopreening is common both between mates and between neighbours Allopreening helps to reduce parasites and it may also have important social functions 34 Frequency of allopreening a neighbour correlates well with current breeding success 34 Allopreening may function as a stress reducer ledges with low levels of allopreening show increased levels of fighting and reduced breeding success 34 Courtship Edit Courtship displays including bowing billing and mutual preening The male points its head vertically and makes croaking and growling noises to attract the females The species is monogamous but pairs may split if breeding is unsuccessful 35 36 Eggs and incubation Edit See also Bird egg Murre eggs Common murre eggs are large around 11 of female weight 28 and are pointed at one end The egg s pyriform shape is popularly ascribed the function of allowing the egg to spin on its axis or in an arc when disturbed however there is no evidence to support this claim 37 Various hypotheses have arisen to explain the egg s shape Pyriform eggs are more stable on a sloping surface than more elliptical eggs such as that of the razorbill 37 The shape allows efficient heat transfer during incubation 38 As a compromise between large egg size and small cross section Large size allows quick development of the chick Small cross sectional area allows the adult bird to have a small cross section and therefore reduce drag when swimming 28 Due to its pyriform shape a higher proportion of the eggshell is in contact with the cliff minimising the effects of impact by neighbouring birds It helps to confine faecal contamination to the pointy end of the egg The blunt end where the embryo s head and air cell are located is kept relatively free of debris allowing gases to pass through the shell unimpeded 39 37 Eggs are laid between May and July for the Atlantic populations and March to July for those in the Pacific The female spends less time ashore during the two weeks before laying When laying she assumes a phoenix like posture her body raised upright on vertical tarsi wings half outstretched The egg emerges point first and laying usually takes 5 10 minutes 40 source source source source source source Herring gull steals an egg Lundy The eggs vary in colour and pattern to help the parents recognize them each egg s pattern being unique 41 Colours include white green blue or brown with spots or speckles in black or lilac After laying the female will look at the egg before starting the first incubation shift 40 Both parents incubate the egg using a single centrally located brood patch for the 28 to 34 days to hatching in shifts of 1 38 hours 28 Eggs can be lost due to predation or carelessness Crows and gulls are opportunist egg thieves Eggs are also knocked from ledges during fights If the first egg is lost the female may lay a second egg This egg is usually lighter than the first with a lighter yolk citation needed Chicks from second eggs grow quicker than those from first eggs However this rapid growth comes at a cost first chicks have larger fat reserves and can withstand temporary shortages of food citation needed Growth of the chick Edit Chicks occupy an intermediate position between the precocial chicks of genus Synthliboramphus and the semi precocial chicks of the Atlantic puffin 42 They are born downy and by 10 days old they are able to regulate their own temperature 17 Except in times of food shortage there is at least one parent present at all times and both parents are present 10 30 of the time 43 Both parents alternate between brooding the chick or foraging for food source source source source source source Adults feeding chick Lundy Provisioning is usually divided equally between each parent but unequal provisioning effort can lead to divorce 36 Common murres are single prey loaders this means that they carry one fish at time The fish is held lengthways in the adult s bill with the fish s tail hanging from the end of the beak The returning adult will form its wings into a tent to protect the chick The adult points its head downwards and the chick swallows the fish head first Alloparenting behaviour is frequently observed Non breeding and failed breeders show great interest in other chicks and will attempt to brood or feed them This activity is more common as the chicks get older and begin to explore their ledge There has also been a record of a pair managing to raise two chicks 44 Adults that have lost chicks or eggs will sometimes bring fish to the nest site and try to feed their imaginary chick At time of extreme food stress the social activity of the breeding ledge can break down On the Isle of May colony in 2007 food availability was low Adults spent more of their time budget foraging for their chicks and had to leave them unattended at times Unattended chicks were attacked by breeding neighbour which often led to their deaths Non breeding and failed breeders continued to show alloparental care 45 Chick Alaska The chicks will leave the nest after 16 to 30 days average 20 22 days 13 and glide down into the sea slowing their fall by fluttering as they are not yet able to fly Chicks glide from heights as high as 457 m 1 499 ft to the water below citation needed Once the young chick has left the nest the male is in close attendance for up to two months The chicks are able to fly roughly two weeks after fledging Up until then the male feeds and cares for the chick at sea In its migration south the chick swims about 1 000 km 600 mi The female remains at the nest site for up to 36 days after the chick has fledged average 16 days 46 Relationship with humans Edit Common murre chick Lundy Breeding plumage Common murre family Pollution Edit Major oil spills double the winter mortality of breeding adults but appear to have little effect on birds less than three years old 47 This loss of breeding birds can be compensated by increased recruitment of 4 6 year olds to breeding colonies 47 Recreational disturbance Edit Nesting common murres are prone to two main sources of recreational disturbance rock climbing and birdwatching Sea cliffs are a paradise for climbers as well as birds a small island like Lundy has over 1000 described climbing routes 48 To minimise disturbance some cliffs are subject to seasonal climbing bans 48 Birdwatching has conflicting effects on common murres Birdwatchers petitioned the UK government to introduce the Sea Birds Preservation Act 1869 This act was designed to reduce the effects of shooting and egg collecting during the breeding season 49 Current concerns include managing the effect of visitor numbers at wildlife reserves Common murres have been shown to be sensitive to visitor numbers 50 Seabirds as indicators of marine health Edit When common murres are feeding their young they return with one fish at a time The provisioning time relates to the distance of the feeding areas from the colony and the numbers of available fish There is a strong non linear relationship between fish density and colony attendance during chick rearing 51 As a food source Edit In areas such as Newfoundland and Labrador the birds along with the related thick billed murre are referred to as turrs or tuirs and are consumed The meat is dark and quite oily due to the birds diet of fish Eggs have also been harvested Eggers from San Francisco took almost half a million eggs a year from the Farallon Islands in the mid 19th century to feed the growing city 52 Notes Edit a b BirdLife International 2018 Uria aalge IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22694841A132577296 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22694841A132577296 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Uria aalge Guillemot National Biodiversity Network NBN Atlas Retrieved 2020 01 31 Harris M P Wanless S Barton T R Elston D A 1997 Nest site characteristics duration of use and breeding success in the Guillemot Uria aalge Ibis 139 3 468 476 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 1997 tb04660 x ISSN 0019 1019 Dunn Ruth E Wanless Sarah Green Jonathan A Harris Michael P Daunt Francis 2019 Effects of body size sex parental care and moult strategies on auk diving behaviour outside the breeding season Journal of Avian Biology 50 7 doi 10 1111 jav 02012 ISSN 1600 048X S2CID 164436494 Dunn Ruth E Wanless Sarah Daunt Francis Harris Michael P Green Jonathan A 7 April 2020 A year in the life of a North Atlantic seabird behavioural and energetic adjustments during the annual cycle Scientific Reports 10 1 5993 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 5993D doi 10 1038 s41598 020 62842 x PMC 7138806 PMID 32265524 Strauch 1985 Guillemot Uria aalge Pontoppidan 1763 Bird facts British Trust for Ornithology Retrieved 20 August 2008 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 Gill Donsker amp amp Rasmussen 2021 https americanornithology org red eggs publisher American Ornithological Society Retrieved 19 August 2021 a b c Mullarney et al 1999 a b Harris amp Birkhead 1985 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses by John B Dunning Jr Editor CRC Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8493 4258 5 Blamire 2008 a b Nettleship 1996 a b Mahoney amp Threlfall 1981 Vaughn 1937 Livezey 1988 Bedard 1985 Birkhead amp Taylor 1977 Piatt John F Nettleship David N April 1985 Diving depths of four alcids PDF The Auk 102 2 293 297 doi 10 2307 4086771 JSTOR 4086771 Mitchell et al 2004 A massive die off Cape Meares State Scenic Viewpoint Oregon State Parks and Recreation oregonstateparks org Retrieved 2019 12 16 Buckingham Lila Bogdanova Maria I Green Jonathan A Dunn Ruth E Wanless Sarah Bennett Sophie Bevan Richard M Call Andrew Canham Michael Corse Colin J Harris Michael P Heward Christopher J Jardine David C Lennon Jim Parnaby David Redfern Chris P F Scott Liz Swann Robert L Ward Robin M Weston Ewan D Furness Robert W Daunt Francis 17 February 2022 Interspecific variation in non breeding aggregation a multi colony tracking study of two sympatric seabirds Marine Ecology Progress Series 684 181 197 doi 10 3354 meps13960 S2CID 244752949 Humphreys et al 2007 a b c d Gaston amp Jones 1998 a b Lilliendahl et al 2003 Harris et al 2008 Bennett Sophie Wanless Sarah Harris Mike P Newell Mark A Searle Kate R Green Jonathan A Daunt Francis 2022 Site dependent regulation of breeding success Evidence for the buffer effect in the common guillemot a colonially breeding seabird Journal of Animal Ecology 91 4 0 14 doi 10 1111 1365 2656 13674 PMC 9305850 PMID 35157312 S2CID 246813729 a b c d Lee Derek E Abraham Christine L Warzybok Peter M Bradley Russell W Sydeman William J 2008 04 01 Age Specific Survival Breeding Success and Recruitment in Common Murres Uria Aalge of the California Current System The Auk 125 2 316 325 doi 10 1525 auk 2008 07007 ISSN 0004 8038 S2CID 85018537 a b Birkhead 1978 a b c Lewis et al 2007 Kokko et al 2004 a b Moody et al 2005 a b c Birkhead Tim R Thompson Jamie E Montgomerie Robert 1 October 2018 The pyriform egg of the Common Murre Uria aalge is more stable on sloping surfacesEl huevo piriforme de Uria aalge es mas estable en superficies inclinadasCommon Murre egg shape and stability The Auk 135 4 1020 1032 doi 10 1642 AUK 18 38 1 Johnson 1941 Birkhead T R Thompson J E Jackson D Biggins J D 2017 The point of a Guillemot s egg PDF Ibis 159 2 255 265 doi 10 1111 ibi 12458 a b Harris amp Wanless 2006 Birkhead Tim 2016 The Most Perfect Thing Inside and Outside a Bird s Egg London Bloomsbury p 117 Gaston 1985 Wanless et al 2005 Harris et al 2000 Ashbrook et al 2008 Harris amp Wanless 2003 a b Votier et al 2008 a b Harrison 2008 Barclay Smith 1959 Beale 2007 Harding et al 2007 White Peter 1995 References EditAshbrook Kate Wanless Sarah Harris Michael P Hamer Keith C 2008 Hitting the buffers Conspecific aggression undermines benefits of colonial breeding under adverse conditions Biology Letters 4 6 630 3 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2008 0417 PMC 2614172 PMID 18796390 Barclay Smith Phyllis 2008 The British contribution to bird protection Ibis 101 115 122 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1959 tb02363 x Beale Colin M 2007 Managing visitor access to seabird colonies A spatial simulation and empirical observations Ibis 149 102 111 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2007 00640 x Bedard Jean 1985 Evolution and Characteristics of the Atlantic Alcidae in Nettleship and Birkhead 1985 pp 1 51 Bennett J 2001 Animal Diversity Web Uria aalge Retrieved 2008 JAN 13 Birkhead Tim R 1978 Behavioural adaptations to high density nesting in the Common Guillemot Uria aalge Animal Behaviour 26 321 331 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 78 90050 7 S2CID 53154295 Birkhead Tim R Taylor Antony M 2008 Moult of the Guillemot Uria aalge Ibis 119 80 85 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1977 tb02048 x Blamire Sheila 2008 A yellow billed Guillemot in Norway Birding World 21 7 306 Archived from the original on 2008 06 26 Retrieved 2008 08 17 Freethy Ron 1987 The Auks an ornithologist s guide Facts on File New York ISBN 0 8160 1696 8 Gaston Anthony J 1985 Development of the young in the Atlantic Alcidae in Nettleship amp Birkhead 1985 pp 319 354 Gaston Anthony J amp Jones Ian 1998 The Auks Alcidae Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 854032 9 Gill F Donsker D amp Rasmussen P Eds 2021 IOC World Bird List v11 2 doi 10 14344 IOC ML 11 2 IOC World Bird List Version 11 2 Harding Ann M A Piatt John F Schmutz Joel A 2007 Seabird behavior as an indicator of food supplies sensitivity across the breeding season Marine Ecology Progress Series 352 269 274 Bibcode 2007MEPS 352 269H doi 10 3354 meps07072 Harris Michael P amp Birkhead Tim R 1985 Breeding Ecology of the Atlantic Alcidae in Nettleship amp Birkhead 1985 pp 155 204 Harris Michael P Bull J Wanless Sarah 2000 Common Guillemots Uria aalge successfully feed two chicks Atlantic Seabirds 2 2 92 94 Harris Michael P Frederiksen Morten Wanless Sarah 2007 Within and between year variation in the juvenile survival of the Common Guillemot Uria aalge Ibis 149 3 472 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2007 00667 x Harris Michael P Newell Mark Daunt Francis Speakman John R Wanless Sarah 2007 Snake Pipefish Entelurus aequoreus are poor food for seabirds Ibis 150 2 413 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2007 00780 x Harris Michael P Wanless Sarah 2003 Postfledging occupancy of breeding sites by female common murres Uria aalge The Auk 120 75 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2003 120 0075 POOBSB 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86711711 Harris Michael P Wanless Sarah 2006 Laying a big e g on a little ledge does it help a female Common Guillemot if Dad s there British Birds 99 230 235 Harrison Paul 2008 Lundy Climbers Club Guides Climbers Club Harrison Peter 1988 Seabirds 2nd ed Christopher Helm London ISBN 0 7470 1410 8 Humphreys Elizabeth M Wanless Sarah Bryant David M 2007 Elevated metabolic costs while resting on water in a surface feeder the Black legged Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla Ibis 149 106 111 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 2006 00618 x Johnson Robert A 1941 Nesting behavior of the Atlantic Murre Auk 58 2 153 163 doi 10 2307 4079099 JSTOR 4079099 Kokko H Harris Michael P Wanless Sarah 2004 Competition for breeding sites and site dependent population regulation in a highly colonial seabird the common guillemot Uria aalge Journal of Animal Ecology 73 2 367 doi 10 1111 j 0021 8790 2004 00813 x a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lewis Sue Roberts Gilbert Harris Michael P Prigmore Carina Wanless Sarah 2007 Fitness increases with partner and neighbour allopreening Biology Letters 3 4 386 389 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2007 0258 PMC 2390679 PMID 17550875 Lilliendahl K Solmundsson J Gudmundsson G A Taylor L 2003 Can surveillance radar be used to monitor the foraging distribution of colonially breeding alcids PDF Condor 105 1 145 150 doi 10 1650 0010 5422 2003 105 145 CSRBUT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 29136400 Livezey Bradley C 1988 Morphometrics of Flightlessness in the Alcidae Auk 105 4 681 698 doi 10 1093 auk 105 4 681 JSTOR 4087381 Mahoney Shane P Threlfall William 2008 Notes on the eggs embryos and chick growth of Common Guillemots Uria aalge in Newfoundland Ibis 123 2 211 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1981 tb00928 x Mitchell P Ian Newton Stephen F Ratcliffe Norman amp Dunn Timothy E eds 2004 Seabird Populations of Britain and Ireland Poyser London ISBN 0 7136 6901 2 Moody Allison T Wilhelm Sabina I Cameron MacMillan Maureen L Walsh Carolyn J Storey Anne E 2004 Divorce in common murres Uria aalge relationship to parental quality Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 57 3 224 doi 10 1007 s00265 004 0856 8 S2CID 25443607 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mullarney Killian Svensson Lars Zetterstrom Dan amp Grant Peter J 1999 Collins Bird Guide 194 197 HarperCollins London ISBN 0 00 711332 3 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 2 Common Murre In del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew amp Sargatal Jordi eds 1996 Handbook of Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzin to Auks 709 710 plate 59 Lynx Edicions Barcelona ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Nettleship David N amp Birkhead Tim R eds 1985 The Atlantic Alcidae Academic Press London ISBN 0 12 515671 5 Sibley David Allen 2000 The Sibley Guide to Birds Alfred A Knopf New York ISBN 0 679 45122 6 Strauch J G Jr 1985 The phylogeny of the Alcidae PDF Auk 102 3 520 539 doi 10 1093 auk 102 3 520 JSTOR 4086647 Vaughn H R H 1937 Flight speed of guillemots razorbills and puffins PDF British Birds 31 123 Votier S C Birkhead T R Oro D Trinder M Grantham M J Clark J A McCleery R H amp Hatchwell B J 2008 Recruitment and survival of immature seabirds in relation to oil spills and climate variability Journal of Animal Ecology 77 5 974 983 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2656 2008 01421 x PMID 18624739 Wanless S Harris M P Redman P Speakman J R 2005 Low energy values of fish as a probable cause of a major seabird breeding failure in the North Sea Marine Ecology Progress Series 294 1 8 Bibcode 2005MEPS 294 1W doi 10 3354 meps294001 White Peter 1995 The Farallon Islands Sentinels of the Golden Gate Scottwall Associates San Francisco ISBN 0 942087 10 0External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Common murre Uria aalge Wikispecies has information related to Uria aalge The RSPB Guillemot BirdGuides Guillemot Uria aalge Common Murre Uria aalge USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter Common Murre Restoration Project at San Francisco Bay NWR Complex Project Puffin Common Murres Sheila Blamire Norway Wildlife 2 Includes her photograph of an aberrant common guillemot with a yellow bill Common murre media Internet Bird Collection Common murre photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Interactive range map of Uria aalge at IUCN Red List maps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Common murre amp oldid 1135620375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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