birding Alaska
Oct 16 2011

Barrow with Wilderness Birding Adventures

 

From October 6-8th I was in Barrow leading a trip for Wilderness Birding Adventures. While bird diversity in Barrow at this time of year is low, we were interested in quality, not quantity, and hoped to be there to witness the Ross’s Gull migration. Going to Barrow in early October is without a doubt the best way to find this high arctic breeder. The quality of birding was indeed high on this trip and we also tallied a surprising trip list of 26 species! Below are a few photo highlights. Click on any photo to enlarge.

Ivory Gull Pagophila eburnea, (with Glaucous Gull Larus hyperboreus in the last shot) Barrow, 6 October 2011.

Although this was a trip to find Ross’s Gulls, this Ivory Gull on the first day of the trip stole the show and gets top billing on this page. It spent much of the morning on the beach in front of us feeding in the froth. We found it again the next day at the end of Point Barrow feeding with a flock of Ross’s Gulls and three Sabine’s Gulls.

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Apr 28 2010

Seal Pup and Thayer’s Gull

Back in the Bering Sea on the NOAA Ship Oscar Dyson.  We left Kodiak on April 23rd and we’ll finish this cruise in Dutch Harbor on May 3rd. The mission of the cruise is to service oceanographic moorings in the eastern Bering Sea.

Young Spotted Seal Phoca largha, Bering Sea, 28 April 2010.

Thayer’s Gull Larus thayeri and third-cycle Glaucous Gull L. hyperboreus, Bering Sea, 28 April 2010.

While watching seals on a small flow of brash ice about 60 miles north of Unimak Island today I noticed this adult Thayer’s Gull in a group of Glaucous and Glaucous-winged Gulls. Thayer’s Gulls are probably casual in the Bering Sea. This adult is separated from Herring, Vega, and Herring x Glaucous-winged Gull hybrids by outer primary pattern, its smallish bill and rounded head, and relatively long primary projection.


Apr 9 2010

The Frozen Bering Sea

On March 6th I left Kodiak on the USCG icebreaker, Polar Sea.  We transited west to Unimak Pass and north to St. Lawrence Island as part of the Bering Sea BEST project, a partnership between the North Pacific Research Board and the National Science Foundation.  We rolled back into Kodiak on April 7th after 33 days at sea.  Here are a few photos from the trip…

Spectacled Eider Somateria fischeri, St. Lawrence Island Polynia, Bering Sea, 23 March 2010.

A flock of Spectacled Eiders from 1000 feet up.  The entire world’s population, about 370,000 birds, winters in the limited open water of the St. Lawrence Island polynia in the Bering Sea.

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