Postbreeding Dispersal and Drift-Net Mortality of Endangered Japanese Murrelets

  • Piatt J
  • Gould P
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Abstract

The incidental catch of seabirds in high-seas drift nets was recorded in 1990- 1991 by scientific observers on commercial squid and large-mesh fishery vessels operating in the North Pacific Transitional Zone. Twenty-six Synthliboramphus murrelet deaths were recorded in the months of August through December. All but one were from the Korean squid fishery in a small area bounded by 38?-44?N and 142?-157?E. Five specimens of the dead birds were collected and later identified as Japanese Murrelets (S. wumizusume). As fishing effort was widely distributed over a large area east of Japan, these data suggest that postbreeding Japanese Murrelets migrate north to winter in a relatively small area southeast of Hokkaido, where persistent eddies form at the confluence of the Oyashio and Kuroshio currents. Fronts between cold Oyashio water and Kuroshio warm-core eddies promote the aggregation of zooplankton and pelagic fishes, which in turn may attract murrelets during the nonbreeding season. The estimated total mortality of Japanese Murrelets in high-seas drift-net fisheries represents a significant proportion of the total world population of this rare and endangered species.

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Piatt, J. F., & Gould, P. J. (1994). Postbreeding Dispersal and Drift-Net Mortality of Endangered Japanese Murrelets. The Auk, 111(4), 953–961. https://doi.org/10.2307/4088827

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