
Julia Matteucci
She/her
M.S. Student
Marine Biology
2150 Koyukuk Drive
Fairbanks, AK 99775
jmatteucci@alaska.edu
Colorado State University
B.S. Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology
2019
Migratory and winter movements and distributions of Pribilof Island black-legged kittiwakes and thick-billed murres
Julia is originally from Houston, Texas. At the first opportunity, she traded the
                                          heat and humidity for snow and mountains by attending Colorado State University in
                                          Fort Collins, Colorado. She quickly fell in love with the Rocky Mountains and took
                                          any opportunity she could to hike and backpack with friends and university clubs.
                                          During her time in Colorado, she developed a passion for winter activities through
                                          snowshoeing and summited four 14ers (mountains with a peak of at least 14,000 feet).
                                          
Julia earned a Bachelor's of Science in Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology and
                                          a minor in Spanish in 2019. She then spent the next five years pursuing seasonal work
                                          as a field biologist working for state, federal, and private consulting agencies in
                                          Colorado, Nevada, Iowa, Wyoming, and Alaska. She fell in love with seabirds while
                                          working on a seabird survey in Prince William Sound and hasn't looked back since!
Julia's research aims to quantify the non-breeding marine habitat use of Black-legged
                                          Kittiwakes and Thick-billed Murres breeding on St. Paul Island, Alaska. She is accomplishing
                                          this by equipping adult breeding individuals with archival geolocator (GLS) tags that
                                          use ambient light levels to track birds' movements throughout the year. These data
                                          will be coupled with molecular sex determination and mercury and stable isotope analyses
                                          of collected blood and feather samples to determine if these characteristics are associated
                                          with variation in seasonal habitat use. Results will be quantitatively compared to
                                          those of previous studies of Pribilof Island seabirds to determine if seasonal habitat
                                          use of the study species has significantly changed, especially in relation to dramatic
                                          environmental changes in the Bering Sea and North Pacific Ocean within the last ~10
                                          years. 
Julia is working closely with the Aleut Community of St. Paul Island (ACSPI) to conduct
                                          this research. Project results will directly inform management of two species of Pribilof
                                          Island seabirds. Further, these data will support ACSPI in advocating for vital marine
                                          protections surrounding St. Paul Island, ensuring that management and conservation
                                          policies are informed by the community and grounded in the most thorough data available.
Pacific Seabird Group
- Rasmuson Fisheries Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Center Graduate Student Fellowship Award (2025)
- Oil Spill Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Institute Graduate Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Fellowship (2025)
- North Pacific Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Board Graduate Student Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Award (2025)
 
				
