Atlantic Laboratory for Avian Research
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alar-unb.bsky.social
Atlantic Laboratory for Avian Research
@alar-unb.bsky.social
Research group at the University of New Brunswick focused on understanding how seabirds respond to ocean warming.

Lab website: https://msialar.wixsite.com/alar-msi
We haven't done a full check, but we might have captured the oldest puffin on Machias Seal Island. While the longevity record for Atlantic Puffin is 45 years (from Iceland), the North American record is 33 years. Last night we captured a bird banded as a chick in 1992, making it 33!🧪🪶
July 9, 2025 at 12:32 PM
After years of seeing the faded plastic band on this puffin and being unable to re-sight it, we finally re-captured it and replaced its bands. This bird was first banded as chick in 1996 making it 29 years old (!) and among the oldest in our records. 🦑🪶🧪
June 17, 2025 at 5:13 PM
Weather is getting warmer and our work is ramping up. First puffin chicks hatched this weekend! The colony is noisy with the peeps of chicks (some being described as sounding like tea kettles). 🦑🪶🐧🧪
June 9, 2025 at 11:52 AM
First Razorbill chicks have hatched! This is a little later than the last three years (first chicks hatched in the last week of May), right on the average for the last 10 years, and a full 2 weeks earlier than 1995-2004! 🪶🦑
June 4, 2025 at 12:09 PM
Another week has flown by, highlights include warbler fallout (!), resightings, adult puffin and razorbill banding, getting our last research blind built (its a bit wonky but safe and will work for the time being), and the start of tourist season. 🦑🪶
May 28, 2025 at 11:05 AM
Week one is done! Our first week was spent getting things set-up and training/orienting new crew members. We've also been banding adult puffins and Razorbills, checking our productivity nests, and re-sighting. If that's not enough we retrieved our first GLS logger of the season! 🐧🦑🧪
May 21, 2025 at 12:50 PM
2025 field season has begun! Crew arrived safely on the island in the early morning of May 13th greeted by terns calling overhead and alcids lounging in the sea. Will do my best to provide regular updates of our work on the island.
May 14, 2025 at 12:15 PM
The Farallon Institute has just launched a new website that is a one-stop shop for seabird time-series data and insights into ocean health. Very happy to be part of this project and to have data from Machias Seal Island included! Check it out here: Seabirds.faralloninstitute.org #ornithology 🐧🧪🦑
December 17, 2024 at 12:24 PM