Breeding seabirds - Gwaii Haanas

Gwaii Haanas has partnered with ECCC to monitor a set of permanent plots mapping colony structure and burrow occupancy rate by excavating samples of burrows of Ancient Murrelet and Cassin’s Auklet. The data are used to determine if the breeding population areas are changing at specific key nesting colonies and if the change signifies an increasing or decreasing population trend. An estimated 1.5 million seabirds breed colonially on the 200+ islands, islets and rocks of Haida Gwaii, including globally and nationally significant proportions of 5 seabird species. A significant threat to breeding seabirds is predation by non-native mammals, notably raccoons and rats. These non-native fauna have destroyed colonies, and ANMU was designated as a species of special concern based on this threat.

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Additional Info

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Last Updated April 17, 2026, 21:15 (UTC)
Created April 17, 2026, 21:15 (UTC)
contact_email tyler.peet@pc.gc.ca
contact_person {}
criticality_level ["educators", "nongovernmental_organizations", "scientists", "students"]
data_dictionary []
geographic_scope []
open_canada_collection primary
open_canada_date_published 2017-10-01 00:00:00
open_canada_keywords {"fr": ["Guillemot à cou blanc", "Starique de Cassin", "système de parcelles", "occupation des terriers", "population reproductrice", "oiseaux de mer reproducteurs", "nichant en colonies", "Colombie-Britannique"], "en": ["Ancient Murrelet", "Cassin’s Auklet", "plot system", "burrow occupancy", "breeding population", "breeding seabirds", "colony-nesting", "British Columbia"]}
open_canada_subject ["nature_and_environment"]
sensitivity_level unrestricted
title_fr Oiseaux de mer reproducteurs - Gwaii Haanas
update_frequency as_needed