Tufted Puffin

Fratercula cirrhata

Tufted Puffin

Fratercula cirrhata
Other Common Names
Crested Puffin
Other Common Names
Crested Puffin

At the Aquarium

Seabird Aviary

Appearance

Tufted puffins have a black body and a big red, orange and yellow bill. They grow to lengths of about 15.5 inches with a wingspan of 23 to 24 inches.

During the summer tufted puffins have a white face with long golden head tufts.

In the winter the head tufts reduce or disappear while their bills become duller in color. Their overall plumage including their face also becomes blackish gray-brown.

Juveniles are smaller and darker with small dull yellow bills.

Habitat

Coasts and shorelines, open ocean

Diet

Crustaceans, mollusks, fish, squid and algae.

Life History

Tufted puffins nest in colonies but they travel and feed alone at sea. Young tufted puffins may live entirely on the open ocean, returning to land to breed once they reach 3 years old. Every year they return to the colony where they were born and usually to the same mate. They breed in colonies on islands, nesting in burrows in grassy areas on slopes or cliffs during the spring and summer. Both males and females build the nests which they line with grass and feathers. Tufted puffins typically lay one egg per year, possibly 2 in the southern part of their range. Eggs are white to bluish-white with gray and brown spots. Both males and females lay on the eggs for about 41 days. Both parents feed their young by carrying fish in its bill and dropping them on the ground near the nest. Tufted puffins may venture far from the colony, sometimes spending 1 to 2 days away from the nest to find food. Young leave the nest about 45 days after hatching.

IUCN Status

Least Concern

Ecosystem & Cultural Importance

Tufted puffins are culturally significant as they are used for food and clothing by Alaskan Natives. Tufted puffins help maintain the balance within the marine food web as predators of various fish and invertebrates.
Northern Pacific Ocean. It spends the winter at sea, and nests during the spring and summer from California to Alaska and from Siberia to Japan.
Along the Oregon Coast tufted puffins nest on islands away from mammalian predators. They occasionally nest on headlands such as Cape Mears, Cape Lookout, Cape Foulweather, and Yaquina Head. Tufted puffins have declined in Oregon and have become a rare sight in areas visible to the public. The most nesting tufted puffins occur at Three Arch Rocks. They are also commonly spotted at Haystack Rock in Cannon Beach and Coquille Point in Bandon.
A tuft puffin’s bill can capture and hold many fish at once, from 5 to 20 fish at a time!

Although tuft puffins are strong fliers, they must run across water and thrash along the surface to take off.

Using their wings and feet to steer, tuft puffins can dive and swim underwater at great depths.

Citations & Other Resources

  • BirdLife International. 2020. Fratercula cirrhata. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020.
  • Alsop, F. 2001. Birds of North America (1st American ed.). DK.
  • National Audubon Society. N.d. Tufted Puffin. Audubon Field Guide. https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/tufted-puffin
  • Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife. N.d. Tufted Puffin. https://myodfw.com/wildlife-viewing/species/tufted-puffin
  • Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife. N.d. Tufted Puffin. https://wdfw.wa.gov/species-habitats/species/fratercula-cirrhata#desc-range
  • Cornell Lab of Ornithology. N.d. Tufted Puffin. All About Birds. https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Tufted_Puffin/overview
  • Ziegler, Y. 2021. Tufted Puffin: Alaska’s Forgotten Bird. Alaska Wildlife Alliance. https://www.akwildlife.org/news/species-spotlight-tufted-puffin