Breeding Ecology of White-winged Scoters on the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska

Project Number: 19
Year Funded: 2004
Lead Institution(s): University of Alaska Fairbanks
Project Lead: David Safine
Collaborator(s): Mark Lindberg (UAF)
Location: Alaska
Focal Species: White-winged Scoter (Melanitta delgandi)
Project Description: Breeding bird surveys indicate a long-term decline in the numbers of White-winged Scoters breeding in Alaska. The highest density breeding areas occur in Northwest Canada and Northeast Alaska, with the largest breeding population in Alaska found on the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge. Little is known about the reproductive life history and breeding habitat of White-winged Scoters on their primary breeding grounds. We are using VHF transmitters to mark females and locate nests of scoters at the Scoter Lake Complex, Yukon Flats NWR. We are using surveys and auxiliary markers to study brood rearing ecology of White-winged Scoters throughout the Yukon Flats NWR. To address questions of nest habitat selection, we are measuring habitat variables at nest sites as well as random sites in the study area.
Project Reports: https://seaduckjv.org/pdf/studies/pr19.pdf
Breeding Ecology of White-winged Scoters on the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska