Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4476595 Marine Pollution Bulletin 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We modeled the risk of seabirds from oil pollution in the Aleutian Archipelago.•Risk was greatest around Unimak Pass and south of Sanak Island, year-round.•High summer in the Western Aleutians but could be avoided

Some of the largest seabird concentrations in the northern hemisphere are intersected by major shipping routes in the Aleutian Archipelago. Risk is the product of the probability and the severity incidents in an area. We build a seasonally explicit model of seabird distribution and combine the densities of seabirds with an oil vulnerability index. We use shipping density, as a proxy for the probability of oil spills from shipping accident (or the intensity chronic oil pollution). We find high-risk (above-average seabird and vessel density) areas around Unimak Pass, south of the Alaska Peninsula, near Buldir Island, and north of Attu Island. Risk to seabirds is greater during summer than during winter, but the month of peak risk (May/July) varies depending on how data is analyzed. The area around Unimak Pass stands out for being at high-risk year-round, whereas passes in the western Aleutians are at high risk mostly during summer.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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