Bird Viewing
Alaska's Birders' Birds — Kittlitz's Murrelet


Kittlitz's Murrelet

Photo of a Kittlitz's Murrelet Related to puffins and murres, this small diving bird is one of the rarest and least known seabirds in North America. The Kittlitz’s Murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) nests in rugged mountains on bare rock or scree slopes, sometimes near glaciers or in previously glaciated areas further inland. During summer, it usually feeds on fish and zooplankton in turbid waters, often near tidewater glaciers, thus its nickname, “Glacier Murrelet.”

Unlike most seabirds, Kittlitz’s Murrelets do not nest in colonies but rely on camouflage and secretive behavior to escape predation. They will lay a single egg in a small scrape, often on the downhill side of a large rock. Their nests are extremely hard to find.

The Kittlitz’s Murrelet is mottled reddish-brown and white when breeding. It closely resembles the Marbled Murrelet and is found in many of the same areas, but the Kittlitz’s is best distinguished by observing white outer tail feathers and white trailing edge on the secondaries when the bird is flushed.

The winter range is not well known. Large population declines have been reported in several core areas in the range of the Kittlitz’s Murrelet, but it can be consistently viewed during the summer months in the areas listed below.

Possible Viewing Areas

  • Resurrection Bay - easiest to find in glacial silty water in summer
  • Kenai Fjords – often seen on return trip from Chiswell Islands
  • Kachemak Bay - on the way to and from Gull Island; between mouth of Grewingk Creek and Aurora Lagoon
  • Glacier Bay National Park – commonly found here

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