The threats to seabirds mentioned above are all well known to conservationists, who are attempting to reduce the impact of these factors on seabirds where possible. Insofar as legal protection is concerned, it must be admitted that there are no marine sanctuaries in Denmark, although several discussions have taken place reviewing the possibility of establishing some in critical areas. There are, however, a number of sanctuaries on islands where seabirds breed. In the Sanctuary Act of 1936 these areas were called "Scientific Reserves" because they were the site of scientific investigations of bird life. All admission was forbidden, at least during the breeding season, and all shooting was prohibited, with few exceptions. These sanctuaries were administered by the government's Nature Conservancy.
The following Scientific Reserves are important for seabirds: Hirsholmene Islands (in Cattegat off Frederikshavn), Knotterne Islands (small islets east of Laesø Island), Vejlerne (diked in, landlocked fjords, densely covered with vegetation, at the Lim Fjord), Tipperne Peninsula and Klaegbanken Island (in Ringkøbing Fjord, western Jutland), Varsø Island (Horsens Fjord, eastern Jutland), and Græholm Island (Christiansø Archipelago, in the Baltic off Bornholm). A detailed description of these sites and their erection, bird life, and ornithological value was given by Salomonsen (1945). More recently, two additional Scientific Reserves have been established: Aegholm Islet (south of Sealand), and Hesselø Island in the southern part of Cattegat.
In addition to these scientific sanctuaries, there are game reserves and governmental forest reserves in Denmark. The game reserves are administered by the Ministry of Agriculture, which is also responsible for hunting legislation. The purpose of game reserves is to support and protect the stock of game, which includes migrating birds. Shooting is usually prohibited, but a restricted shooting season is allowed at some reserves. More than 50 game reserves are now present and functioning. Regulations differ widely from reserve to reserve, but entry to some of them is not allowed in the breeding season. Many reserves are important for breeding or migrating waterfowl and some seabirds. In fact, a total of 26 game reserves contain seabirds, the most important of which are the following: Ulvedybet (landlocked fjord at the Lim Fjord), Hjarbaek Fjord (landlocked fjord with brackish water at the Lim Fjord), Felsted Kog (landlocked fjord at Nissum Fjord), Jordsand (large stretches, almost 11,000 ha, of the Danish Waddensea), Stavns Fjord (at Samsø Island), Esrum Lake (in northern Sealand), and Kalvebod Beach (at Amager Island, near Copenhagen).
In the Nature Conservancy Act of 1969, differences between scientific and game reserves were abolished, although regulatory provisions that were in force for the scientific sanctuaries were maintained. Unfortunately, the amalgamation of the two types of reserve has given more power to the hunters' associations, which constitute the majority of the administrative body of the reserves, the so-called Game Commission ("Vildtnævnet"). However, any change in status of the original scientific reserves will not be tolerated by conservationists and other environmental groups in Denmark.
The Faroe Islands
The number of seabirds in the Faroe Islands is greater than in any other region of the North Atlantic, and is closely related to the extraordinary richness of the plankton. The high phytoplankton production is due to a strong vertical mixing of the water in the northeast Atlantic, especially at the slopes of the submarine ridges, where both tidal currents and oceanic currents are usually strong. The resulting upwelling enriches the upper layers of water with large quantities of nutrient salts for the phytoplankton, and this, in turn, produces a teeming life of macroplankton and fish on which the seabirds are dependent (Salomonsen 1955).
The enormous seabird population of the Faroes is apparent from the first description of the islands, "De mensura orbis terrae," a document written in the year 825 by the Irish monk Dicuilus, who described the most characteristic feature of the Faroes as being the fact that "the islands were full of various kinds of marine birds." This richness has remained to the present, and has provided an important source of food for the resident human population, particularly in former times. There are few, if any, countries in the world in which wild-fowling and other exploitations of birdlife have played such a major role as in the Faroes. A number of elaborate and varied bird-catching methods were invented, and these have remained essentially the same for at least the last 500 years. Bird-fowling at great heights on precipitous sea-cliffs was a dangerous venture, and each year lives were lost. The main thing, however, was that food obtained from fowling meant life and death for local inhabitants and so was undertaken in such a well-balanced way that the seabird populations did not decrease or disappear. Some fowling still takes place, but on a reduced scale, since most men are now engaged in the fishery during the summer. Shooting is now of much greater importance than in former times.
The Faroese game acts (from 1897, 1928, and 1954) are very severe and show a broad consideration for birdlife. Practically all terrestrial birds, including shorebirds, are protected, and existing regulations permit people to catch or shoot only common murres, razorbills, puffins, shags (Phalacrocorax aristotelis), fulmars, gannets, parasitic jaegers (Stercorarius parasiticus), and gulls, as well as a few "pest" species like crows (Corvus corone) and ravens (C. corax). The legal right of fowling on a "fowling cliff" belongs to the registered owner of the land on which the cliff is situated. There are some sound restrictive laws for these cliffs. For example, shooting within 3.2 km of any seabird colony is prohibited.
| Species | Number of birds caught per year |
|---|---|
| Uria aalge | 60,000 |
| Fratercula arctica | 270,000 |
| Puffinus puffinus | 1,500 |
| Fulmarus glacialis | 80,000 |
| Morus bassanus | 1,300 |
| Total | 412,800 |