Seabirds fatten up on anchovies near Santa Cruz Wharf, harbor

US

SANTA CRUZ — Marine life and seabirds of all sorts, from pelicans and gulls to migratory terns and shearwaters, have amassed off the coast in recent weeks — flapping, squawking, swirling and diving — feathers flying in a feeding frenzy as each creature fights for their share of the anchovies swimming below the ocean’s surface.

The spectacle is an expected one in the summer for those that study and admire the swarming seabirds such as the long-flying and deep-diving sooty shearwaters, shifting from east to west en masse along the Santa Cruz coast.

“It’s remarkably consistent year to year that we have large numbers of sooties in our bay,” said research wildlife biologist with the United States Geological Survey’s Western Ecological Research Center Josh Adams. “It may appear in certain years that there’s more of them or they are here for longer or they disappear sooner, but it’s hard to get a handle on the numbers because they travel in such large flocks.”

Feeding frenzy of pelicans and other birds in the Monterey Bay near the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf this week. (Shmuel Thaler – Santa Cruz Sentinel) 

In addition to the sooty shearwaters, Monterey Bay attracts other types of shearwaters in smaller numbers such as the short-tailed shearwaters from Australia, Buller’s shearwater also hailing from New Zealand and pink-footed shearwaters from Chile.

“It’s similar in size but has a little bit different morphology and also doesn’t dive as deep as the sooty,” said Adams. “Our summer is a sort of mixing time for a lot of species that travel to California from the Southern Hemisphere. We also have a handful of dominant resident breeding birds here that we see in big numbers off of Santa Cruz like western gulls and common murres and California brown pelicans and some other gull species. We have a really large diversity of seabirds here.”

Now that the summer is winding down, Adams said that most of the migratory sooty shearwaters will soon start making their return trip to New Zealand.

“We’ll start seeing them leave now and through the next three weeks or so and then they’ll all be gone,” said Adams. “The anchovies will be somewhat depleted by then because there are a lot of animals eating them, but the anchovies are not leaving our system.”

Although the clouds of the diving seabirds would seem like a hazard for boaters, Santa Cruz Harbormaster Blake Anderson said their attention is mostly fixated on the anchovies and they tend to avoid the boats. He said it’s the anchovies and not the birds that rouse a feeling of nervousness for boaters and those in the harbor especially.

“The birds themselves don’t come into the harbor but the anchovies do,” said Anderson. “Anytime we see the shearwaters out there, we have a pretty good idea that there’s large schools of anchovies close by, so we start monitoring where those anchovies are going, and if they’re getting close to the harbor, we’ll deploy our aeration system.”

Anderson said that some anchovies have entered the Santa Cruz Harbor and they have switched on the aeration system, but they remain hopeful that the fish will remain out at sea.

“We’re running our aeration system and monitoring the oxygen levels,” said Anderson. “It’s stable for the moment, but if we do get one of these schools coming in here, we could be in trouble.”

Anchovies swarmed the harbor a year ago, but the aeration system helped avoid a massive die-off. The last big baitfish die-off occurred in the late summer of 2014 and led to a massive cleanup effort at the harbor and a foul fishy smell to permeate along the affected coastline.

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