That's a lot of puffins! To go back to the main puffin cam page, click HERE.
The
puffin cam overlooks a puffin loafing area. The best viewing
time is between 10am and 5pm EDT. If your image is blurry or
you can’t see a puffin, please check back later. You
can also see “best of the puffin cam from 2006” by
clicking on http://www.projectpuffin.org/puffin-cam-best.html and
video clips at http://www.projectpuffin.org/movies.
Puffin
Cam is sponsored by BARBARA'S
BAKERY, home of the deliciously crunchy,
high-fiber PUFFINS cereal & snack
bars.

Thanks for visiting!
To
view the previous season's "Best of the Puffin Cam" site,
please click HERE.
Seal
Island National Wildlife Refuge—May 2008
The seabird camera on Seal
Island National Wildlife Refuge went live to the Internet
today--providing real time views of puffins, terns, guillemots,
razorbills, murres, eiders and other Maine coast seabirds.
There is one camera
positioned in seabird habitat. It sits on a popular puffin roosting
ledge where puffins spend time socializing among wooden decoys.
From this location, the camera pivots nearly 360 degrees to show
puffin nesting habitat under huge granite boulders.
Puffins begin laying
eggs in early May and these begin hatching in mid June. After
an incubation period of about six weeks, the tiny ‘puffling’
will hatch and parents will then spend the next six weeks carrying
food back to the nest and tending the chick.
Seal Island is part
of the Maine
Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge. It is located 20
miles south of Rockland, ME. The camera is scheduled to be in
place each year from late May through mid September when most
of the seabird will have headed back to their winter homes on
the open ocean. Be sure to check in every year!
Residents and visitors
to the Maine coast can see the live video on a large screen and
operate the cameras at the Project
Puffin Visitor Center, located at 311 Main Street in Rockland,
Maine. The center is open daily from 10AM to 5PM (7PM on Wednesdays)
from May through October.
Video
cameras/technical support provided by:
Visit
other nesting birds via the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's
Nest Box Cams web site:

About Project
Puffin: The National
Audubon Society started Project Puffin 33 years ago.
The program has restored colonies of Atlantic Puffins
to Eastern Egg Rock and Seal Island National Wildlife
Refuge by translocating nearly 2000 puffin chicks from
Newfoundland. Project Puffin began in 1973 in an effort
to learn how to restore puffins to historic nesting islands
in the Gulf of Maine. Techniques developed by the Project
are now used worldwide, helping more than 40 other seabird
species.
Audubon
is dedicated to protecting birds and other wildlife and the
habitat that supports them. Our national network of community-based
nature centers and chapters, scientific and educational programs,
and advocacy on behalf of areas sustaining important bird populations,
engage millions of people of all ages and backgrounds in positive
conservation experiences.
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Atlantic Puffin
walking on rocks

View of Seal
Island National Wildlife Refuge (by S. Walker)

Matt places the burrow cam into puffin burrow 5 (by Steve Kress)

One week old puffin chick (by Steve Kress)

Atlantic Puffin (by Steve Kress)
| A few photos of species
observed by Puffin Cam |

Razorbill landing (by Bill Scholtz)

Common Term
with Herring (by Scott Hall)

Common Eider (by the Puffin Cam)

Black Guillemot (by Bill Scholtz)

Common Tern
Chick (by Bill Scholtz)
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