1st Artic Shorebird Festival – this summer in Utqiagvik, Alaska!
The first Arctic Shorebird Festival is happening this summer in Utqiagvik, Alaska, and everyone is invited!
The first Arctic Shorebird Festival is happening this summer in Utqiagvik, Alaska, and everyone is invited!
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!
Archipelago Research and Conservation LLC (ARC) is hiring a 9-month full-time position to document seabird distribution across Kaua‘i and monitor breeding success and relative abundance of Newell’s Shearwaters and Hawaiian Petrels at colony sites as well as burrow checks, camera deployments, and Song Meter deployments to monitor breeding success. Note: POSITION FILLED.
This is a call for nominations for Lifetime Achievement and Special Achievement Awards to be awarded at the 50th Annual Meeting of the Pacific Seabird Group in 2023.
Marine Ornithology is a peer-reviewed journal published by the Pacific Seabird Group on behalf of a consortium of seabird groups: African, Australasian, Dutch, Japanese, and Pacific.
PSG is extending the abstraction submission deadline to this Friday, December 3rd, 2021.
The newest edition of Pacific Seabirds (the official publication of the Pacific Seabird Group) is online and available for everyone to read!
It’s been just over a month since our first-ever Virtual Annual Meeting: PSG 2021. It was a hectic week, but as the dust settled, we are realizing just how great an event it was. The numbers speak for themselves!
Just a reminder of the conversation on Offshore Wind on Tuesday February 23rd, from 10-11:30 PST.
You are in luck! Single-day registration to the PSG 2021 Virtual Meeting is available through Friday, February 26th.
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 »