Abstract

Summary Aleutian Tern Onychoprion aleuticus numbers have been in steep decline at known Alaskan breeding colonies in recent decades (IUCN recently uplisted to ‘Vulnerable’). Available data suggest that most of the species may currently breed in Russia. Efforts to document global abundance and trends have been hampered by remoteness of colonies, lack of a formal monitoring programme, and the absence of reproducible population estimates with quantifiable errors, especially for large colonies. We surveyed four historically large colonies in Russia (2018) and Alaska (2019), which together may comprise 30–50% of the global breeding population. At each colony we obtained high resolution aerial photographs using a small Unmanned Aircraft System (sUAS). The large size of the colonies and the minimum altitude required to identify terns made it impractical to collect imagery of the entire colony. Instead, we employed a sampling approach, with sample locations selected based on spatially balanced acceptance sampling. Statistically sampled, low altitude sUAS images provided a fast, reproducible, and rigorous count of abundance for geographically large colonies, with low disturbance, and were generally consistent with concurrent ground-based observations. Concurrence among observers in photo counts indicated high precision in counts of attending birds and unattended nests, although species attribution in mixed tern colonies remains a source of significant uncertainty. Our results indicate that the four colonies surveyed here together supported <2,500 pairs of Aleutian Terns in the survey years. None of the colonies approached their peak size reported previously, likely due to recent predation, long-term decline, cold early season weather, or other factors. If these reduced colony sizes are representative of the current conditions, the implications for the global population would be dire.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, coastal populations of terns (Sternini) are under increasing stress from energetic storms and rising sea levels (Erwin et al 2010, Chen et al 2015), climate and fishing induced changes in food supplies (Velarde et al 2015), and offshore wind development (Everaert and Stienen 2007, Newton and Little 2009)

  • Numbers of breeding pairs at known colonies of Aleutian Terns Onychoprion aleuticus across Alaska have been in steep decline in recent decades (Renner et al 2015), which led IUCN to uplist the species to ‘Vulnerable’ (BirdLife International 2021)

  • On Chaika Island, we estimated from the ground that 300–400 individual terns (Aleutian and Common together) were present during our visits

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal populations of terns (Sternini) are under increasing stress from energetic storms and rising sea levels (Erwin et al 2010, Chen et al 2015), climate and fishing induced changes in food supplies (Velarde et al 2015), and offshore wind development (Everaert and Stienen 2007, Newton and Little 2009). According to Tiunov and Blokhin (2014), Sakhalin Island in the Russian Far East supports 36–39% of the world’s breeding population, with ~25% of the global population Unless a large colony has gone undetected, which seems unlikely, these four colonies together are the largest for this species worldwide and may represent up to half the global breeding population

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