PEARD BAY
The newest of the Reserve’s Special Areas, Peard Bay encompasses 107,000 acres in the northwest between Utqiaġvik and Wainwright. This area includes high densities of ice seals and polar bears, and the highest density of spectacled eider nesting areas in Alaska. The colorful males display black feathers surrounding white eye patches, resembling a pair of spectacles! Tens of thousands of shorebirds, especially red phalaropes, move through Peard Bay after breeding.
Peard Bay also provides haul out areas for ringed and bearded seals. Peard Bay is characterized by thousands of small thaw lakes, freshwater bodies formed in a depression by meltwater from thawing permafrost.
SPECIAL HABITAT
Haul-outs for marine mammals and migration area for shorebirds and waterbirds. It's a Continentally-significant Important Bird Area.
SPECIES
Ringed seals, spectacled eiders, polar bears, walrus, waterfowl and shorebirds.
1,000 LAKES
Peard Bay is dotted by thousands of tiny thaw lakes — water that melts and collects on permafrost.
SIZE
Approximately 107,000 acres, the second smallest of the five Special Areas.
WHY PEARD?
Named by English naval officer Frederick William Beechey after a fellow officer.
LOCATION
VISIT MORE: Peard Bay | Colville River | Kasegaluk Lagoon | Teshepuk Lake | Utukok River Uplands
THREATS
One threat to the Peard Bay Special Area is potential energy development in the Arctic Ocean — there is currently no prohibition against developing an infrastructure corridor, such as a pipeline, to transport oil from offshore drilling through Peard Bay and into Alaska’s interior or across northern Alaska to facilities at Prudhoe Bay. Climate change is also having a profound effect on the region — rising temperatures and the disappearance of sea ice is causing more and more marine mammals, such as seals and walrus, to haul-out on the mainland, resulting in greater vulnerability to predators and hunters. In addition, melting permafrost is removing a critical buffer between coastlines and the impact of ocean waves. As permafrost disappears, coastal erosion could become significant, destroying wildlife habitat and nesting areas and disrupting local communities. The coastal denning and feeding habitats for threatened polar bears also become more important every year as sea ice levels continue to decline.