Sea-Birds. James Fisher
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Sea-Birds - James Fisher страница 7
The rocks and coral reefs of Bermuda, which is 580 miles from Cape Hatteras, the nearest point on the United States mainland, support an interesting little community of sea-birds, which consists of the northernmost outposts of the breeding population of an otherwise completely tropical species, the white-tailed tropic bird Phaëthon lepturus, besides the common tern, the roseate tern, possibly the Manx shearwater Puffinus puffinus, Audubon’s shearwater, and the cahow Pterodroma cahow, thought to be extinct for many years.
It is in the Bay of Fundy, then, on the borders of the U.S. and Canada (Maine and New Brunswick) that the northern birds really begin. Here in burrows in the island rocks nest the southern elements of the rather small Atlantic population of Leach’s petrel Oceanodroma leucorhoa. Here, too, are the representatives of the northern race of double-crested cormorant, which are separated by a gap of some hundreds of miles from the geographical race of the same species belonging to Florida and the Carolinas.
Other birds which come on the scene between Cape Cod and the Bay of Fundy are the great black-backed and herring-gulls, Larus marinus and L. argentatus, which are now quickly spreading south down the coast, and the arctic tern Sterna paradisaea, which still nests as far south as Cape Cod. If we move north to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, we can also bring in an outpost population of the European cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo, the ring-billed gull Larus delawarensis, which is very closely related to our common gull, the common guillemot Uria aalge, and, rather surprisingly, an arctic species, Brünnich’s guillemot Uria lomvia, whose breeding distribution extends from the Magdalen Islands via Newfoundland and Labrador to the High Arctic There is a curious relict population of the Caspian tern also here. In many ways the Gulf of St. Lawrence has arctic properties and there is, as we have seen, a very steep gradient in water temperature at its mouth, at the convergence of the west wind drift and the Labrador current. Here we find the southern outposts of the largest temperate North Atlantic sea-bird, the gannet Sula bassana—though the majority of its breeding-population is found on the other side of the ocean; and we meet our first kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla.
In structure the coasts of the Atlantic right round from Maine via Nova Scotia, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Newfoundland, Labrador, Greenland and Iceland to Britain, have a good deal of similarity. They have a fairly even supply of estuaries, inlets, beaches, sands, cliffs, skerries, stacks and islands, and it is probable that the distribution of no sea-bird is seriously limited by lack of suitable nesting sites.
There are two inland species of North American dark-headed gull, Franklin’s gull Larus pipixcan, and Bonaparte’s gull L. philadelphia, neither of which breeds near the coast.
From the Gulf of St. Lawrence, via Newfoundland, Labrador, Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, we find a gradual disappearance of the temperate, sub-arctic and some low arctic species as we progress towards the shores where the sea is still near-freezing in July—the true High Arctic. In Newfoundland we reach the limit for breeding gannets, ring-billed gulls and common terns, and perhaps also Caspian terns. The Leach’s petrels breed as far as Newfoundland Labrador, but no farther, and it is doubtful whether the double-crested cormorant now breeds as far. South-west Greenland is less ‘arctic’ than opposite parts of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago at the same latitude; and it is not surprising that some species extend beyond Labrador to West Greenland, though not to Baffin Island and the other Canadian islands. Such species are the razorbill and common guillemot, the latter having only one small colony in West Greenland. The European cormorant extends to West Greenland and previously had a small outpost in Baffin Island, from which it has now disappeared, and it is also extinct in Newfoundland Labrador, after much human persecution. The puffin does not breed in the Canadian Arctic but goes far north in Greenland where it is of a distinctive, large arctic race.
Species which extend in breeding-range all the way from Newfoundland to Arctic Greenland and Canada are the herring-gull, great black-back, kittiwake, arctic tern and black guillemot. All these except the blackback reach the High Arctic, if we regard the Iceland gull Larus argentatus glaucoides, as a herring-gull, as we think we should.
The glaucous gull Larus hyperboreus, does not now breed in Newfoundland, but nests commonly from Newfoundland Labrador all the way to the High Arctic, as does the arctic skua Stercorarius parasiticus; two other skuas, the pomarine S. pomarinus, and the long-tailed skua S. longicaudus, do not breed in Labrador, but farther north in both Canadian and Greenland Arctic. On the west side of the Atlantic-Arctic the fulmar Fulmarus glacialis, breeds no farther south than Greenland and Baffin Island, although it nests south to about latitude 50° north on the east side of the Atlantic.
This leaves the three High Arctic sea-birds of the West Atlantic for consideration—the little auk Plautus alle, Sabine’s gull Xema sabini, and the ivory-gull Pagophila eburnea. All three breed in the more northerly parts of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and Greenland, though the first may not have more than one colony west of Baffin’s Bay. Sabine’s gull is a rare bird that often nests in arctic tern colonies. The ivory-gull is the most northerly bird in the world in the sense that it breeds nowhere south of the Arctic Circle, but as far north as the land goes. The extraordinary, rare, Ross’s or rosy gull Rhodostethia rosea, which normally nests in the aldergroves of some north-flowing rivers of eastern Siberia, has once bred in Greenland.
The breeding sea-birds of the lands and islands north of the Arctic Circle belonging to the Atlantic or the Atlantic section of the Arctic Ocean.
With the exception of a few gulls, sea-birds entirely desert the arctic regions bordering Baffin’s Bay and Davis Strait in October and do not return until April. From no other part of the northern hemisphere is there so great a withdrawal of sea-birds to avoid a period of inhospitable climate.
The eastern arctic islands—Jan Mayen, Bear Island and Spitsbergen, Franz Josef Land and Novaya Zemlya, which lie across the Polar Basin where it abuts on the North Atlantic, have a very similar breeding sea-bird community to that of Greenland, though none has so many members. We can best make this comparison in the form of a table, adding columns for the Canadian Arctic, Arctic Russia-in-Europe and Arctic Norway. (see here)
We now come to the seabird community of Iceland, Faeroe, the British Isles, Scandinavia, the Baltic, and the North Sea and English Channel. This community is very homogeneous, considering the range of latitude over which it is spread, though there are some members which do not reach the south end of this range and a few which do not reach the north. Among the species which are found over almost the entire twenty degrees of latitude are the Manx shearwater, the storm-petrel Hydrobates pelagicus, the gannet, the shag Phalacrocorax aristotelis, the cormorant, the herring-gull, the lesser blackback Larus fuscus, the great blackback, the black-headed gull L. ridibundus, the kittiwake, the common and arctic terns, the razorbill, the guillemot, and the puffin. Species