In the Christmas Bird Count this year, one of the marine birds noted in particularly high numbers was the Common Merganser, Mergus merganser, with a count of 258 along the Metchosin/Sooke shores.
I noted today( rainy and overcast) that there were 32 Common Mergansers ( 6 males and 26 females down on the north end of Taylor Beach . Often when we see them there throughout the winter, they are in smaller groups and are continually diving for food. Today the pattern was quite different as they were all in courtship mood. The males have a distinctive forward bow, then an upward stretch of their necks and then a quick scurry on the surface around a female. These are probably one of the most colourful seabirds on our coast and well worth looking for in protected bays and inlets during the winter. (Pedder Bay also often has a dozen or so) .
Of course these birds as other over-wintering seabirds in our water are very vulnerable to oil spills. If the Kinder-Morgan Pipeline goes through, The current risk from a maximum of 5 oil tankers going through the southern entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca each day, is bad enough, but when one contemplates the added risk of accidents from 34 tankers (each over 200 metres in length) plying our waters by 2015, the future for overwintering birds like this is rather dismal.
Other articles about this concern:
- Kinder Morgan and Tanker traffic in the Salish Sea
- What happens to waterfowl in an oilspill?
- Black Oystercatchers on the Front Line for Oil Spills
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The Future for our Elephant Seal Population?