|
MBNMS
Home
Introduction
Sancutary Program
Accomplishments
Intertidal
Systems
Rocky Subtidal
Systems
Open Ocean & Deep
Water Systems
The Physical
Environment
Wetlands and
Watersheds
Endangered &
Threatened Species
Marine
Mammals
Bird Populations
Marine Mammals & Bird Surveys
Harvested
Species
Human
Interactions
Further
Reading
Credits

|

|
|

|
Deposition
of Marine Birds and Mammals on Monterey
Bay Beaches
|

|
In
May 1997 the Sanctuary established a monitoring
study of beachcast birds and mammals in the
Monterey Bay region. During monthly surveys,
trained volunteers systematically search 49 km of
sandy beaches along Monterey and Carmel Bays. The
primary goal of the program, designated Beach
COMBERS (Coastal Ocean Mammal / Bird Education and
Research Surveys), is to obtain information on
rates of stranding for all species of marine birds
and mammals in Monterey Bay.
Preliminary
results:
January-August 1998
Seabirds:
The
results outlined below refer only to
newly-deposited birds. Beachcast deposition of
marine birds from January to August 1998 was
extremely variable. A low beachcast deposition was
recorded in February and high deposition was
recorded during April. Beachcast deposition
remained high from early April through early July.
The amount of deposition was greater at all beaches
throughout the study area from May through July,
compared to the same period in 1997. The causes of
this elevated deposition during 1998 are not clear.
Many foraging guilds seem to have been affected and
overall species diversity was greater in 1998,
although Common Murres dominated the composition of
seabird carcasses encountered. In particular,
overwintering and resident seabirds were more
frequently found beachcast during the May - July
1998 surveys compared to the same period in 1997.
Although no comparable data exist for April 1997,
deposition rates of overwintering and resident
birds for April 1998 were also high. The extended
period of high beachcast indicates that resource
limitations (perhaps caused by El Niño) may
have been a factor contributing to elevated seabird
mortality from March through early July. Seabird
deposition recorded during August was much lower
than the four previous months and remained low
through the fall.
Among individual seabird
species, Surf Scoters and Cassin's Auklets
exhibited the greatest difference between years and
Common Murre carcasses were found three months
earlier than the previous year. The causes for
these differences are not known; however, several
necropsied Surf Scoters exhibited a high parasite
load of banjo worm, and the Cassin's Auklet, a
small planktivore, may have been more susceptible
to El Niño-enhanced storms than larger
fish-eating species.
Marine Mammals:
In contrast with seabirds, marine mammal carcasses
could not be reliably marked at each survey, and
therefore the results outlined below include all
carcasses found, regardless of residence time.
Marine mammal deposition was relatively constant
from January through early May of 1998, and the May
1998 count was nearly identical to the number
encountered during May 1997. A large (four-fold)
increase in the deposition of marine mammals
occurred between the May 1998 and June 1998
samples, with the June 1998 sample being nearly
three times as high as the June 1997 sample. The
most frequently encountered species was the
California sea lion.
The increase in marine
mammal deposition during May and early June 1998
may have been caused by the unusual presence of
female California sea lions in Monterey Bay during
late spring/early summer. Normally, these animals
would be expected to be at breeding rookeries off
Southern California; however, El Niño
conditions may have forced them to move north in
search of resources. Although the causes of the
increase in marine mammal mortality are not known
with certainty, it is suspected that a toxic diatom
bloom during May (Pseudo-nitzschia australis) was
partly responsible. The number of marine mammal
carcasses encountered remained high during July and
August, but these were likely the same carcasses as
those counted during the June survey.
Scott R. Benson1, Andrew
DeVogelaere2, and James T. Harvey1
1Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
2Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary
|

|
Monterey
Bay Marine Mammal and Seabird
Surveys
|

|
In 1998 Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and the
University of California Santa Cruz continued a
third year of ship-board surveys (partially funded
by the Sanctuary), which were designed to examine
marine mammal and seabird habitats in Monterey Bay.
A set of transect lines, spaced at three-mile
intervals, spanned the Bay from Santa Cruz to
Cypress Point and extended approximately fifteen
miles offshore. Surveys were conducted monthly
between May and November 1998, typically spanning
two consecutive days.
A total of 402 marine
mammal sightings encompassing seventeen species
were made during the seven surveys. The California
sea lion was the most frequently encountered marine
mammal. Pacific white-sided dolphins and humpback
whales were the most frequently-encountered toothed
cetacean and baleen whale, respectively. Common
dolphins were numerically the most abundant
cetacean, because this species was seen in large
groups.
A total of 2,359 sightings
of 9,994 seabirds were made while the ship was on
transect. Species composition varied from month to
month. The most abundant families of seabirds were
the shearwaters and alcids (80 percent and 11
percent of all birds seen, respectively). Species
composition was similar from May through September,
but changed notably in October and November, with
fewer Sooty Shearwaters and Common Murres, and an
increased number of Buller's Shearwaters,
Black-vented Shearwaters, and Rhinoceros
Auklets.
Preliminary results
indicate that El Niño conditions likely
affected the number and types of marine mammals
encountered during the surveys. Dall's porpoises
were seen less frequently than in previous years,
whereas common dolphins were more numerous. In 1998
California sea lions were unusually abundant in
early summer, when they normally would be expected
to be at breeding rookeries off Southern
California. The number of baleen whale sightings
was greater in 1998 than 1997, and peak abundance
was observed later in the season (August vs.
May-June). The observed pattern of abundance was
similar for zooplankton, the whales' primary prey.
Seabird assemblages were roughly similar to those
seen in 1997, but abundances of several species
were notably lower (e.g., Common Murres, Cassin's
Auklets, and Brandt's Cormorants). Furthermore, a
large number of Storm Petrels was seen in September
1998, whereas this group of species was rare on all
previous 1996-97 surveys.
Scott R. Benson1, Donald
A. Croll2, and Baldo Marinovic2
1Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
2University of California Santa Cruz
|