Where Do Maine’s Atlantic Puffins Go for the Winter?

探花精选 scientists tracked breeding puffins from Maine to finally learn where they pass the colder months鈥攊n a maze of underwater canyons and mountains southeast of Massachusetts.

Steve Kress spent more than 40 summers off the rocky coast of Maine, uncovering every detail about Maine's breeding Atlantic Puffins and their ecology. But there was one mystery he just couldn鈥檛 get to the bottom of. 鈥淸The puffins] are only on land for about four months; most of the time they鈥檙e at sea,鈥 says Kress, who is the founder of and was credited with bringing the birds back from the brink of extinction in Maine during the 1970s using unique conservation techniques. The fact that the birds were hiding out for more than half the year was baffling to him and his fellow scientists.

Now, after years of trying to trace the puffins鈥 trail, Kress and his team have finally tracked the birds to an offshore paradise on the U.S. Continental Shelf, southeast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. 

Geolocators lead to a startling discovery.

Back in 2009, Kress and other researchers at 探花精选鈥檚 Seabird Restoration Program started hunting for clues to where their neighborhood puffins were swimming off to every August. They attached geolocators to birds from the colonies at Maine鈥檚 Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge and Matinicus Rock and tried to track them. After two failed rounds between 2009 and 2013鈥攐ne due to concerns over faulty data, and the other because of a manufacturing glitch鈥攔esearchers ran a third attempt over 2013 and 2014 that finally yielded some hard-won information about the birds鈥 winter retreat.

The data, gathered last spring from 19 puffins that returned to their burrows on the two islands, showed that the birds embark on an adventurous route that takes them to two main locations. They start by swimming north through the fish-rich waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Kress explains, spending about a month in Canada before veering south to overwinter in waters about 200 miles off the coast of Cape Cod.

Their final destination is an epic, underwater landscape: home to New England鈥檚 famed 鈥渃oral canyons,鈥 which go deeper than the Grand Canyon, and huge submerged mountain ranges that stretch for hundreds of miles along the ocean floor. The is populated with impressive swathes of cold-water coral, kelp forests, whales, dolphins, a plethora of fish species鈥攁nd as we now know, Atlantic Puffins, which are probably benefiting from some quality foraging in the area. 鈥淭he canyons must be supporting a food web that extends up through the water column to the surface,鈥 says Tony Diamond, a wildlife ecology professor at the University of New Brunswick who is conducting similar research on the puffins of Machias Seal Island in the Gulf of Maine. 

New facts provide ample cause for protection.

The discovery comes at the perfect time, too. In September of last year, scientists and conservationists began advocating for a around the coral canyons and seamounts near Cape Cod. If approved, it would be the first marine monument in the U.S. side of the Atlantic, and would protect the region against potential future threats like dredging by fishing vessels, undersea mining, and oil drilling. 鈥淚t comes back to this: We need to do as good a job as possible protecting the habitats where [puffins] both nest and winter,鈥 says Kress. 鈥淭hey already have enough issues from climate and shifting food chains.鈥

Kress鈥檚 current research shows that warming seas in the Northeast are threatening the availability of forage fish for puffins, meaning there鈥檚 less food available for chicks during breeding season. That could be causing young to fledge before they鈥檝e gained enough weight, reducing their chances of survival. By tracking more birds throughout the year, scientists can figure out where the parents are searching for food, and if those locations are shifting over time. This summer, the Seabird Restoration Program will be using GPS tags鈥攚hich are more precise than geolocators鈥攖o study the birds鈥 foraging habits in greater depth.

As tagging technologies grow more sophisticated, a clearer picture of the puffins鈥 winter homeland will emerge鈥攁long with cues on how to protect them. 鈥淕iven that this species spends most of its time at sea, we need to develop the tools to protect them at sea, as well on land,鈥 Diamond says. 鈥淓ven well-known birds, like puffins, are still revealing secrets about how and where they live,鈥 adds Gary Langham, 探花精选鈥檚 chief scientist.

Secrets are thrilling, but when it comes to conservation, finding the answers pays off in a big way.