LIS: Restaurant for Birds

LIS Long Island Sound "Bird Restaurant" -- with its seasonally changing menus

20210225

19. Long Island Sound Research

Long Island Sound Research and Cruises


This is a draft post, under construction.  It will include some LIS research in recent years (most of it COA and Research Committee based), including content like this:

https://sites.google.com/view/lisgullsplanktontrip/home 















Faulkner’s Island trip in December 2013 with Keith Mueller (see his blog below), Tina Green, Kathy Van Der Aue, Sara Zagorski, Mark Danforth and Tom Robben:

New England Coastal Birds: December (unofficial CBC) boat ride to Faulkner's Island
























20210220

20. Gulf of Maine Research

Tom Robben (part 1) for COA and (part 2) for Michelle Staudinger, from University of Massachusetts, Amherst, et al 

This topic is discussed at 5 hours 36 minutes of the video recording:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube

This is a working draft, under construction.

PART 1:
The COA Research Committee focused a lot of attention on Stellwagen Bank and the Gulf Of Maine between 2014 and 2019, including many two-day cruises from Portland, Maine to Yarmouth, Canada and back to Portland. We were trying to document the birds and marine mammals along that 420-mile round trip route, also known as the GNATS Transect (Gulf of maine North Atlantic Time Series), since it started being studied in 1912 by the famous marine biologist Henry Bigelow, and in recent years by Barney Balch and his team from the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, in Maine.   We were trying to find all the birds along this route, and compare them against birds seen there in previous decades. 





Here are two of the multiple teams which did those GOM crossings with us...


Kevin, Frank, Tom, Eric, Les and Dave...

During these years we got more involved with several research efforts in the GOM and joined a RARGOM derived team led by Michelle Staudinger and worked on that project, and its resulting paper (see Part 2 below)... 




PART 2:

"It's about time: A synthesis of changing phenology in the Gulf of Maine ecosystem."


This topic is discussed at 5 hours 36 minutes of the video recording:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube

This is a working draft, under construction. 


“It’s about time: A synthesis of changing phenology in the Gulf of Maine ecosystem” by Michelle Staudinger, et al. 
“This comprehensive review summarizes the state of the science of shifting phenology in the GoM region and identifies information gaps related to taxonomic groups of high conservation and management concern. Our findings demonstrate a clear need for increased emphasis on phenological research in the region and should serve as a catalyst for future investigations. We have highlighted a number of case studies where actions can be taken to reduce uncertainty and guide adaptation efforts to avoid disruption of the ecosystem services in a rapidly changing ocean.”
This is a great example of scientists studying the phenological changes across an entire wide complex ecosystem, the Gulf of Maine, and finding that less is known than we expected.  Birds are just one part of the Gulf of Maine ecosystem. All the GOM bird species in this study, are also seen in Connecticut waters in Long Island Sound, although some very irregularly.    

















To learn more about this, please follow the internet links above. 

20210209

21. Sabine's Gull Tracking

Tom Robben for Iain Stenhouse and Mark Mallory.  A very brief summary will be posted here. 

You can see this talk at 5 hours 38 minutes of the video recording:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube

This is a working draft, under construction. 

Sabine's Gull is a very rare visitor to Connecticut, in Long Island Sound, and rare anywhere along the US East Coast.   Here is one such recent 2021 visit to Connecticut, in Long Island Sound, reported thanks to Nick Bonomo...

Why is this gull widely distributed in the Arctic, but so rarely seen in the Eastern USA?  Away from its breeding grounds it is extremely pelagic, spending most of its life on the ocean, away from land. Its travels were not well understood until high technology was applied to these gulls in the last 15 years, as reported by Iain Stenhouse and by Mark Mallory in parallel research efforts.  See the images below from their various papers...



























To learn more about this please follow the internet links above. 

And follow this link to learn more about light level geolocators...


20210201

22. Shearwater Tracking

Tom Robben for Kevin Powers.  A very brief summary will be posted here. 

You can see this at 5 hours 39 minutes of the video recording:  COA's Birds and the Environment Science Conference - Online - YouTube

This is a working draft, under construction.