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Biologist

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AVG. SALARY

$66,710

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EDUCATION

Doctoral degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Decreasing

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Many marine biologists earn their living interpreting the natural world for non-experts. This job requires the ability to bring people closer to nature through words.

You're a marine biologist who guides nature tours on land and sea in Alaska. Using the information below, prepare what you would say to the people on your tour at each of the following moments:

  • As you are just heading out -- you'll want to give some background here
  • When you pass a group of nesting puffins
  • When a glaucous-winged gull flies nearby
  • When you see a mother seagull giving food to a hatchling
  • When you are heading back in

Here's your information:

Gull Island harbors a remarkable colony of seabirds. Kittiwakes, murres, gulls, cormorants, puffins and guillemots call the island home during the long summer days.

Every year, thousands of people travel by boat to the island to witness the spectacle of nesting seabirds. Eight different species, totaling more than 20,000 seabirds, live on Gull Island during the summer months.

A typical season might see 10,000 black-legged kittiwakes, 8,500 common murres, 1,200 glaucous-winged gulls, 140 pelagic cormorants, 16 red-faced cormorants, 100 tufted puffins, 20 horned puffins and two pigeon guillemots.

Among the most abundant seabirds on Gull Island are the gulls known as black-legged kittiwakes. Named for their nasal ki-ti-waak call notes, kittiwakes live 10 to 20 years and raise one to two young each summer. Unlike most gulls, kittiwakes spend most of their lives at sea.

Less numerous and more exotic are the two species of puffins on the island, the tufted puffin and horned puffin. The large, vividly colored beaks of puffins function as ornaments for courtship during the summer months. They become smaller and less colorful after breeding.

Puffins forage for fish by diving to depths of as much as 400 feet. They use their wings to "fly" through the water with their tails spread and feet extended backwards to aid in steering.

Adult female glaucous-winged gulls have an orange dot on their beak. Why? The chicks are attracted to peck at the bright orange dot on the beak of their mother. This alerts her to provide food.

Gulls will eat almost anything. They act as scavengers on beaches and garbage dumps.

Sometimes they eat the eggs and young of other birds. Young gulls, which usually are darker than adults, can take as long as four years to mature.

Millions of birds migrate from many parts of the world to nest in Alaska during the summer. Seabirds begin appearing around Gull Island in May. Large numbers "raft up" together in the waters around Gull Island before nesting on rocks at the end of May.

Seabirds begin leaving the island by the end of August. In mid-September, seemingly overnight, the island becomes deserted. Most of the birds that inhabit Gull Island spend the rest of the year at sea, where they are seldom observed.

In general, their migration patterns are not well known. Scientists think the birds spend the winter in a wide range of areas, from the edge of pack ice to the waters off Baja, California.

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