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Introduction
The Surfbird’s winter range is among the longest and narrowest of any North American breeding bird. During the boreal winter, Surfbirds are found from Kodiak I., AK, to the Strait of Magellan, Chile, a distance of >17,500 km, and the winter range extends inland only a few meters above the tide line. Outside the breeding season, this species is confined almost entirely to rocky coastal shores, where it feeds on mollusks and other intertidal prey, often amid the splash and spray of incoming waves; hence its name.
The Surfbird was first described from a specimen collected from Prince William Sound on Captain Cook’s voyage to Alaska in 1778. Ironically, Prince William Sound has only recently been identified as the principal spring staging area, where much of the world Surfbird population gathers in May before dispersing directly to mountain breeding sites to the west and north. Only during the short breeding season do Surfbirds occur away from the coast, and nearly a century and a half elapsed after the species was described for science before its nest and eggs were first discovered. Early reports from native Alaskans that Surfbirds nested on “bare mountains in the interior” (Nelson 1887: 128) were dismissed, but ultimately they were proven right by Dixon (1927), who found the first nest in 1926 near Mt. McKinley in central Alaska.
Senner, Stanley E. and Brian J. Mccaffery. 1997. Surfbird (Aphriza virgata), The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Retrieved from the Birds of North America Online: http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/266