Senior Marine Ecologist
My primary research objective with Point Blue is to combine existing long-term reproductive monitoring datasets with new information from tracking studies and remotely derived environmental observations to model population- and individual-level responses of seabirds to climate variability and human-related threats. This work builds upon the legacy of research conducted at our long-term field station on Southeast Farallon Island.
I first joined Point Blue as a summer seabird intern in 2012, returning in 2014 as a program biologist. I completed my PhD at the University of Alaska Fairbanks in 2020 where I addressed questions related to age-specific reproductive strategies of Cassin’s auklets, along with their winter dispersal patterns. In addition to my time on the Farallones, I have worked on multiple seabird projects on islands in the Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, the Columbia River, the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, and Tasmania. Prior to discovering seabirds, I spent several years working with humpback whales on the east coast of Australia, and on industry vessels as a marine fauna observer on Australia’s west coast. I also maintain a 100-ton offshore captains license, and operated whale and seabird tours out of Monterey Bay during my college years.
When not on the Farallones, I work remotely from my home in Tacoma Washington.
Oceanographic drivers of winter habitat use in Cassin's auklets
Johns ME, Warzybok P, Jahnke J, Lindberg M, Breed GA. (2019) Ecological Applications. doi:10.1002/eap.2068
Increased reproductive investment associated with greater survival and longevity in Cassin’s auklets
Johns ME, Warzybok P, Bradley B, Jahnke J, Lindberg M, Breed GA. (2018) Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 285:20181464.
Age, timing, and a variable environment affect double brooding in a long-lived seabird
Johns ME, Warzybok P, Bradley B, Jahnke J, Lindberg M, Breed GA. (2017) Marine Ecology Progress Series. 564: 187-197.
Email: Mike Johns