Faces of Seabird Conservation
A sneak preview of three profiles for the upcoming Faces of Seabird Conservation exhibit at the 2024 Pacific Seabird Group Annual Meeting.
A sneak preview of three profiles for the upcoming Faces of Seabird Conservation exhibit at the 2024 Pacific Seabird Group Annual Meeting.
Learn more about four incredible artists and their work inspired by seabirds at Año Nuevo Island.
Meet some of the up-and-coming seabird scientists and recipients of sponsored memberships through PSG HELPS.
As you may have heard, PSG’s official publication, Pacific Seabirds, is undergoing some exciting changes and will soon be available each spring and fall as an engaging blog on the Pacific Seabird Group website.
The newest issue of Marine Ornithology is now available online, and is filled with exciting research! Learn all about the factors affecting egg size in Scripps’s Murrelets, underwater kleptoparasitism by a Galapagos Flightless Cormorant, resource competition and anthropogenic impacts on Kauaʻi seabird populations, and more!
PSG is seeking a new Managing Editor of Marine Ornithology, PSG’s scientific journal. Don’t miss this great opportunity to be part of the exciting future of Marine Ornithology! The position operates with a high degree of independence and the successful candidate will have the opportunity to shape the future of the journal. Deadline to apply: 1/30/2023. To communicate your interest, please send a CV…
The Pacific Seabird Group Communications Committee is currently soliciting feedback on the organization’s internal publication, Pacific Seabirds.
The newest edition of Pacific Seabirds (the official publication of the Pacific Seabird Group) is online and available for everyone to read!
The Fall 2017 and Spring 2018 Volumes are now ready! Please go to the Publications page to view or download. Click here.
Click here for a list of the recent seabird publications.
Marine Ornithology is an open access journal that is published through a partnership of the African Seabird Group, Australasian Seabird Group, Dutch Seabird Group, Japanese Seabird Group, and Pacific Seabird Group.
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The objective of the Conservation Fund is to advance the conservation of seabirds in developing countries primarily in or bordering the Pacific Ocean by providing funds for conservation and restoration activities, and building within-country seabird expertise. Learn More »