Bird cliff
Appearance
Bird cliffs, or nesting cliffs, are steep cliffs with numerous small shelves which serve as nesting locations for bird colonies. Bird cliffs are found on islands in the North Atlantic and Arctic, such as the Faroe Islands, Iceland, the Svalbard archipelago and on islands off Northern Norway. Among species that nest in large numbers on bird cliffs are common murre, thick-billed murre, razorbill, kittiwake, little auk and Atlantic puffin. The number of breeding couples may exhibit large variations depending on available food. Bird cliffs have often been exploited as a food resource by the local population, as well as being used by hunters and egg collectors.[1]
Gallery
-
Kittiwakes on a bird cliff at the island of Runde.
-
Colony of thick-billed murre at bird cliff of Stappen, Bear Island.
-
Látrabjarg bird cliff, Iceland.
-
Bird hunters at the Faroe Islands.
-
Atlantic puffin at Røst.
References
- ^ Mehlum, Fridtjof. "Fuglefjell". In Henriksen, Petter (ed.). Store Norske Leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 30 November 2011.