“…The Bering Sea Project, along with prior ecosystem and long-term ecological studies, demonstrated that juvenile (age-0 to 1) walleye pollock Gadus chalcogrammus and euphaussiids (krill) were key prey items for seabirds in the SEBS in recent decades; however, capelin Mallotus villosus, sand lance Ammodytes hexapterus, and other prey also were regionally or historically important (Springer et al 1986, Sinclair et al 2008, Renner et al 2012, Harding et al 2013). Many seabird species in the Bering Sea are omnivorous, consuming different species of zooplankton and fishes, spatially between colonies or ecoregions, seasonally, and when self-feeding vs. provisioning chicks (Hunt et al 2002a, Paredes et al 2012, Renner et al 2012, Harding et al 2013. Abundance of these prey species can vary greatly by season, year, and region (Brodeur et al 1999, Hollowed et al 2012, Parker-Stetter et al 2013, Ressler et al 2014; for example, physical forcing from wind and winter sea ice extent over the shelf can greatly affect the distribution and abundance of fish populations in the SEBS (Hunt et al 2002b, Stabeno et al 2012a).…”