May our baby murre chick’s flippity flappies serve as your Monday Motivocean! She’s growing up quick behind the scenes and getting more formurredable by the minute! ____ Natural History It might be easy to mistake this bird for a penguin, with its white belly, dark head and wings, and upright posture. But common murres aren’t even related to penguins. Common murres are seabirds that spend eight or nine months of each year continuously at sea. Those short wings are perfect for diving and “flying” under water. Conservation Because seabirds spend so much time on the surface of the water, and because they congregate in large groups for nesting, they’re threatened by oil spills. Murres dive deep—as deep as 330 feet (100 m). Unfortunately, this puts them in danger of being trapped in gill nets, where they drown. Pesticide compounds found in the eggshells of murres in California pose a threat to future reproductive success. Cool Facts Common murres don’t build nests like many birds. Instead, the females lay their eggs on bare rock or soil on steep cliffs. Fortunately, the pear-shaped—or pyriform—eggs stay quite safe there. If an egg is disturbed, it pivots around its pointed end, whereas an oval egg might roll off the edge of the cliff. A murre chick leaves the cliff in dramatic style. Even without proper flight feathers, it hurls itself off the edge and glides down to sea—a drop of 800 to 1,000 feet (244 m to 304 m). The male murre escorts the chick out to sea, where he feeds and cares for it until the chick can fly on its own. ____ Whale hello there! We hope you liked this video. Subscribe to our channel for more from the Monterey Bay and our mission to inspire conservation of the ocean: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_… We’re on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MontereyAq And Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/montereybaya… Instagram too: https://www.instagram.com/montereybay… And Tumblr! https://www.tumblr.com/blog/montereyb…