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  2. Horned puffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horned_puffin

    Both parents take turns incubating the egg over about 41 days, and spend another forty days raising the chick. The fledgling leaves the nest alone and at night, making its way towards open water, then quickly dives and swims away to begin independent life. [18] [19] Rises in ocean temperature have increased the reproductive rate of the horned ...

  3. Seabird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabird

    Seabird mortality caused by long-line fisheries can be greatly reduced by techniques such as setting long-line bait at night, dying the bait blue, setting the bait underwater, increasing the amount of weight on lines and by using bird scarers, [104] and their deployment is increasingly required by many national fishing fleets.

  4. Fulmar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulmar

    Fulmar eggs were collected until the late 1920s in the St Kilda islands by their men scaling the cliffs. The eggs were buried in St Kilda peat ash to be eaten through the cold, northern winters. The eggs were considered to taste like duck eggs in taste and nourishment. [16]

  5. Shearwater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearwater

    They nest in burrows and often give eerie contact calls on their night-time visits. They lay a single white egg. They lay a single white egg. The chicks of some species, notably short-tailed and sooty shearwaters, are subject to harvesting from their nest burrows for food, a practice known as muttonbirding , in Australia and New Zealand.

  6. Atlantic puffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_puffin

    The Atlantic puffin (Fratercula arctica), also known as the common puffin, is a species of seabird in the auk family.It is the only puffin native to the Atlantic Ocean; two related species, the tufted puffin and the horned puffin being found in the northeastern Pacific.

  7. Northern storm petrel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_storm_petrel

    Most species nest in crevices or burrows, and all but one species attend the breeding colonies nocturnally. Pairs form long-term, monogamous bonds and share incubation and chick-feeding duties. Like many species of seabirds, nesting is highly protracted, with incubation taking up to 50 days and fledging another 70 days after that.

  8. Bird migration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_migration

    Seabirds fly low over water but gain altitude when crossing land, and the reverse pattern is seen in land birds. [34] [35] However most bird migration is in the range of 150 to 600 m (490–2,000 ft). Bird strike Aviation records from the United States show most collisions occur below 600 m (2,000 ft) and almost none above 1,800 m (5,900 ft).

  9. Seabird breeding behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabird_breeding_behavior

    The term seabird is used for many families of birds in several orders that spend the majority of their lives at sea. Seabirds make up some, if not all, of the families in the following orders: Procellariiformes, Sphenisciformes, Pelecaniformes, and Charadriiformes. Many seabirds remain at sea for several consecutive years at a time, without ...