nena masthead
NENA Home Staff & Editors For Readers For Authors

Estimated Abundance of Hydrobates leucorhous (Leach’s Storm-Petrel) on Hay Island, New Brunswick

Rhyl Frith1,*, David M. Krug1, Robert A. Ronconi1,2, and Sarah N.P. Wong1,2

1Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, 1355 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada. 2Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 45 Alderney Drive, Dartmouth, NS B2Y 2N6, Canada. *Corresponding author.

Northeastern Naturalist,Volume 28, Issue 2 (2021): 179–188

Abstract
Hydrobates leucorhous (Leach’s Storm-Petrel) is widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere, but its North American populations are declining. The causes and extent of the decline are uncertain, making continued population monitoring and identification of colonies a priority for the management of this species. Detailed long-term studies of a large colony on Kent Island in the Grand Manan Archipelago, NB, Canada, have been ongoing since the 1930s, yet the presence and abundance of petrels nesting on neighboring islands is poorly documented. We conducted a census of Hay Island, which is connected to Kent Island by a 300-m stretch of intertidal zone, during mid-incubation in July of 2018 to determine burrow densities and occupancy rates and estimate the breeding population size. We estimated the population of breeding pairs to be 2786 (95% CI ± 624), with most active burrows and the highest burrow occupancy rates occurring in open, non-forested areas dominated by Dryopteris spp. (wood ferns). Overall burrow densities and occupancy rates on Hay Island were lower than nearby colonies. Baseline population estimates of Leach’s Storm-Petrels in unassessed colonies like Hay Island are important for on-going monitoring, improving regional population estimates, and conservation planning.

pdf iconDownload Full-text pdf (Accessible only to subscribers. To subscribe click here.)

 

 



Access Journal Content

Open access browsing of table of contents and abstract pages. Full text pdfs available for download for subscribers.

Issue-in-Progress: Vol. 31 (2) ... early view

Current Issue: Vol. 31(1)
NENA 30(2)

Check out NENA's latest Monograph:

Monograph 23
NENA monograph 23

All Regular Issues

Monographs

Special Issues

 

submit

 

subscribe

 

JSTOR logoClarivate logoWeb of science logoBioOne logo EbscoHOST logoProQuest logo