Breeding plumage is dark brown with few contrasting marks.
Marbled murrelet range.
These stocky little birds dive for zooplankton and fish using their wings to fly underwater.
No other north american member of the auk family alcidae nests in trees.
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The marbled murrelet usually nests in trees 200 years old or older.
However marbled murrelets have been found up to 59 miles 95 km inland in washington 35 miles 56 km inland in oregon 22 miles 37 km inland in northern california and 11 miles 18 km inland in central california.
Within this range they can be found up to 75 km inland.
Slightly darker cap and blotchy pale belly.
The 1997 recovery plan for the marbled murrelet usfws 1997 identified six conservation zones throughout the listed range of the species.
Note black cap that extends below the eye a white.
Strategically important areas for conservation are identified below.
Marbled murrelets occur along 4 000 kilometers of coastline extending from california to alaska.
Mottled in milk chocolate brown during the summer adults change into stark black and white for winter.
Marbled murrelets are seabirds that forage in marine waters but nest in forests.
The geographic centre of the species range is in southeast alaska and alaska and canada are home to the largest numbers of birds.
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T he breeding range of the marbled murrelet extends from bristol bay alaska south to the aleutian archipelago northeast to cook inlet kodiak island kenai peninsula and prince william sound south coastally throughout the alexander archipelago of alaska and through british columbia washington oregon to northern monterey bay in central california.
A seabird that s also a forest bird the marbled murrelet fishes along the foggy pacific coast then flies inland to nest in mossy old growth trees.
In washington marbled murrelets nest in mature and old growth conifer forests and sometimes in comparatively younger forests with residual old growth trees.
Nonbreeding birds are sharply patterned black white and gray.
Because they rely on old growth trees for.
Small seabird that breeds in old growth evergreen forests sometimes far from the coast.
Though the marbled murrelet was first described in 1789 its nest remained undiscovered until 1974.
They locate their nest in a depression on a mat of moss lichen or debris accumulations on large branches.
Marbled murrelets are coastal birds that occur mainly near saltwater within 1 2 miles 2 km of shore.