Fig. 1. Place-names in the region of the Chukchi and Bering seas.
Cursory aerial surveys conducted by J. C. Bartonek, J. G. King, and D. R. Cline (U.S. FWS 1973a; U.S. NPS 1973; this paper) in 1972 and 1973 provided information on the location and relative size of most, if not all, colonies of cliff-nesting marine birds between Point Barrow and the Bering Strait, including those at Cape Lisburne, at Motherhood Point, Nine-mile Point, Cape Deceit, Towalevic Point, Sullivan Bluff, all on the northern base of the Seward Peninsula, and at Fairway Rock. The relative size of populations of most species was probably underestimated because the burrow-and crevice-nesting species were largely unseen.
Bering Sea
Aside from work by Gabrielson and Lincoln (1959) and the early but understandably incomplete accounts by Nelson (1883, 1887) and Turner (1886), no comprehensive description of the avifauna of the Alaskan coast of the Bering Sea exists. Many studies adequately describe local avifauna, and some of them are exemplary assessments of the status of populations.
Most of the coastline suitable for cliff-nesting marine birds and most of the smaller nearshore islands from the Bering Strait south to the tip of the Alaska Peninsula were reconnoitered piecemeal from aircraft between 1970 and 1973 by J. C. Bartonek, J. G. King, D. R. Cline, C. D. Evans, and M. L. Plenert (U.S. FWS 1973a, 1973b; this paper). In late June 1973 Bartonek, Cline, and Plenert made brief reconnaissances on foot of King, Besboro, and Shaiak islands. Bartonek and J. G. Divoky, traveling by boat and occasionally on foot, reconnoitered colonies at Cape Seniavin, a portion of the Walrus Islands group, Shaiak Island, and the coastline from Cape Peirce around Cape Newenham to Security Cove (U.S. FWS 1973a, 1973b; this paper). Although these cursory surveys (especially those from aircraft) tended to identify nesting sites of cliff-nesting birds while missing sites used by burrow-and crevice-nesting species, information was obtained on the location and relative size of many previously unreported colonies.
The mainland and island colonies in Norton Sound have received little notice in the published literature. Bailey (1943, 1948), although working mainly at Little Diomede and in Arctic and Lopp lagoons on the north side of the Seward Peninsula, mentioned the birds at Wales Mountain and Tin City. Nelson (1883, 1887) traveled throughout the region studying the avifauna and the anthropology of Eskimos. Grinnell (1900b) at Nome, McGregor (1902) along the Koyuk River, Hersey (1917) and Turner (1886) near St. Michael, and Cade (1952) at Sledge Island provide fragmentary examples of the area's marine bird populations. Colonies at King, Besboro, Egg, and Sledge islands, near York Mountains, and at Bluff were described in proposals for new National Wildlife Refuges (U.S. FWS 1973a).
Sealy et al. (1971) reviewed the literature and discussed the various zoogeographic relationships among the avifauna of St. Lawrence Island. Fay and Cade (1959) estimated numbers and biomass of all birds on St. Lawrence Island but did not identify locations and sizes of particular populations; consequently, replication of their estimates is precluded. An exemplary study by Bédard (1969) identified the locations and sizes of all populations of crested auklets (Aethia cristatella), least auklets (A. pusilla), and parakeet auklets (Cyclorrhynchus psittacula) on the island. Sealy (1973) identified breeding sites of horned puffins (Fratercula corniculata) there and throughout the species' range. Thompson (1967) listed the birds observed at Northeast Cape and on nearby Punuk Islands.