Identifying key marine habitat sites for seabirds and sea ducks in the Canadian Arctic

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Language of the publication
English
Date
2018-10-16
Type
Accepted manuscript
Author(s)
  • Mallory, Mark L.
  • Gaston, Anthony J.
  • Provencher, Jennifer F.
  • Wong, Sarah N. P.
  • Anderson, Christine
  • Elliott, Kyle H.
  • Gilchrist, H. Grant
  • Janssen, Michael
  • Lazarus, Thomas
  • Patterson, Allison
  • Dominix, Lisa
  • Spencer, Nora C.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing

Abstract

The Canadian Arctic hosts millions of marine birds annually, many of which aggregate in large numbers at well-defined sites at predictable times of the year. Marine habitats in this region will be under increasing threats from anthropogenic activities, largely facilitated by climate change and long-term trends of reduced sea ice extent and thickness. In this review, we update previous efforts to delineate the most important habitats for marine birds in Arctic Canada, using the most current population estimates for Canada, as well as recent information from shipboard surveys and telemetry studies. We identify 349,160 km2 of key habitat, more than doubling earlier suggestions for key habitat extent. As of 2018, 1% of these habitats fall within the boundaries of legislated protected areas. New marine conservation areas currently being finalized in the Canadian Arctic will only increase the proportion protected to 13%.

Subject

  • Arctic,
  • Aquatic birds,
  • Marine biology,
  • Marine conservation areas

Rights

Pagination

75 pages, annexes

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Green

Identifiers

ISSN
1208-6053
1181-8700

Article

Journal title
Environmental Reviews
Journal volume
27
Journal issue
2
Accepted date
2018-10-11
Submitted date
2018-06-14

URI

Collection(s)

Biodiversity

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