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Second North American Sea Duck Conference - Patuxent Wildlife ...

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David Kidwell and Matthew C. Perry<br />

SECOND NORTH AMERICAN SEA DUCK CONFERENCE<br />

DELINEATION OF SURF SCOTER HABITAT<br />

IN CHESAPEAKE BAY, MARYLAND:<br />

MACROBENTHIC AND SEDIMENT COMPOSITION<br />

OF SURF SCOTER FEEDING SITES<br />

USGS <strong>Patuxent</strong> <strong>Wildlife</strong> Research Center, Laurel, MD 20708 USA; dkidwell@usgs.gov<br />

Surveys of surf scoters (Melanitta perspicillata) along the Atlantic coast of the United States have<br />

shown population declines in recent decades. The Chesapeake Bay has traditionally been a key<br />

wintering area for surf scoters. Past and present research has shown that bivalves constitute a major<br />

food item for seaducks in the Chesapeake Bay, with surf scoters feeding primarily on hooked mussel<br />

(Ischadium recurvum) and dwarf surf clam (Mulinia lateralis). Degraded water quality conditions<br />

in the Chesapeake Bay have been well documented and have been shown to greatly influence the<br />

composition of benthic communities. Large concentrations of feeding surf scoters (>500 individuals)<br />

in the Bay were determined through monthly boat surveys. Locations consistently lacking surf scoters<br />

were also determined. Macrobenthos were seasonally sampled at 3 locations containing scoters and 3<br />

locations without scoters. A 1 kilometer square grid was superimposed over each location using GIS<br />

and sampling sites within the square were randomly chosen. Benthos were sampled at each site using<br />

SCUBA and a meter square quadrat. Biomass and size class estimates were determined for all bivalves<br />

within each kilometer square. Results indicated that scoter feeding sites contained significantly greater<br />

biomass of M. lateralis, I. recurvum, and Gemma gemma than locations where no scoters were present.<br />

Substrate differences were also detected, with scoter feeding sites being composed of a sand/shell<br />

mix while non-scoter sites consisted primarily of mud. This data indicates that surf scoters in the<br />

Chesapeake Bay are selecting areas with high densities of preferred food items, potentially maximizing<br />

there foraging energetics. In addition, two scoter feeding sites also contained a patchwork of eastern<br />

oyster (Crassostrea virginica) and oyster shell, on which much of the I. recurvum was attached. This<br />

suggests the possibility that surf scoters utilize eastern oyster habitat and the dramatic depletion of<br />

oysters in the Bay could be a possible factor in surf scoter decline. More research is needed into the<br />

possible relationship between surf scoters and the eastern oyster.<br />

NOV. 7-11, 2005 ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND, USA<br />

91

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