Cassin auklets found washed up near Tofino - Action News
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British Columbia

Cassin auklets found washed up near Tofino

Scientists are trying to determine why thousands of tiny seabirds called Cassin's auklets have washed up on the West Coast, all the way from B.C. to California.

More than 100,000 of the small seabirds have been found dead along Pacific coast since October

Mysterious seabird deaths

10 years ago
Duration 2:16
More than 100,000 Cassin auklets found washed up near Tofino

Scientists are trying to determine why thousands of tiny seabirds called Cassin'sauklets have washed up on the West Coast, all the way from B.C. to California.

More than 100,000 carcasses of the small, white-bellied birds have been found dead since October, including hundreds found along Long Beach in Pacific Rim National Park near Tofino, B.C.

Mass die-offs of Cassin's aucklets, small, white-bellied grey birds, have been reported from British Columbia to San Luis Obispo, Calif. (Ben Margot/Associated Press)

Experts say young auklets often die during winter storms, but this year up to 100 times the normal number are washing ashore in some places along the coast.

About 80 per cent of the species' breeding population of 3.5 million birds is estimated to live around the Scott Islands, located off the northern tip of Vancouver Island.

Ucluelet resident Mary Christmas said that in her decades walking the beaches near her home on the west coast of Vancouver Islandshe had never seen anything like what she found Dec. 22.

"There were about 100 dead birds. It was quite disturbing," said Christmas.

Parks Canada staff collected 157 dead Cassin'sauklets from a small section of Long Beach nearby. Some were frozen and sent for necropsies to try to understand what is causing the mass die-off.

Others have reported finding hundreds of the birds on beaches in Haida Gwaii, located to the north of Vancouver Island.

U.S. testing points to starvation

While Parks Canada staff awaitresults, University of Washington biologist Julia Parrish saidsome evidence suggests the birds are not being affected by any sort of toxin, but are starving to death.

Parrish said itis unclear why, because other birds that feed on the same types of shrimp and plankton aren't affected.

Cassin's auklets are small seabirds that spend much of their life in the open water of the north Pacific Ocean.

"We have never seen a die-off of Cassin's like this," saidParrish.

Her best guess is several factors are at play, including too many young birds born this year, conditions at sea pushing them closer to shore than normal and perhaps something involving their prey.

"We are also hypothesizing this is not proven, so our best guess that these birds, which normally can go quite far out to sea they're small birds but they're tough little things, and they'll spend the winter far out over the North Pacific we think for some reason the whole population is much closer to the shore," said Parrish.

"So when a Cassin's is dying, it has a much greater chance of reaching the shore than normal," she speculated.

Whetherthe die-off is being triggered by natural forces or if something elseis at play, Parrish said,the result is still unfortunate.

"It's a tragic event. It's an untoward event. We have never seen a die-off of Cassin's like this, so that in and of itself says something."

"I don't think it's going to cause the population to wink out, but it's enough to make me sit up and pay attention."

Cacilia Honisch, a resident of Tlell on Haida Gwaii, took this picture of some of the hundreds of Cassin's auklets she spotted on a two-kilometre stretch of East Beach. (Cacilia Honisch)

With files from Keith Vass