Twenty-five essential and nonessential elements were analyzed in Arctic seabirds to study the influence of phylogeny, tissue, Arctic region, and diet on avian element accumulation and to identify co-occurrence among metals. Muscle and liver concentrations were positively correlated, generally being higher in liver than in muscle, and generally did not differ by sex. Zinc showed the highest absolute concentrations in all samples (mean, 11.2-26.7 μg/g in muscle, depending on species and area), followed by copper (5.2-7.5 μg/g), arsenic (0.5-5.4 μg/g), selenium (1.0-5.8 μg/g), rubidium (1.4-2.2 μg/g), and cadmium (0.04-1.2 μg/g). Mercury levels ranged from 0.05 to 0.8 μg/g in muscle. The concentrations varied among species (dovekie [Alle alle]...