Twenty-four species of albatrosses roam the world's oceans south of
30°S and north of 30°N, for these are the windiest latitudes and
albatrosses need the wind to fly. They are members of the family of
petrels, or 'tube noses' - although no-one is really sure what purpose
the tubes that line each side of their bill actually serve.
They vary in size, with the largest being the Wandering Albatross,
which has a wing span of around 3.5 metres (the greatest of any bird)
and a head the size of a child's. Their flying abilities are legendary
- soaring effortlessly over the world's wildest oceans, and returning
to land only to breed.
All species of albatross build
nest mounds of earth, mud, moss and grass. These nests are on high,
windy slopes necessary for taking off in the prevailing winds. They
only lay one egg at each breeding attempt (in October/November), which
is incubated by the male for 60 to 90 days. The chicks stay at the nest
site for about a year.
The chick is cared for by both
parents and is often left for long periods of time while the parents go
out to sea looking for food - often for days at a time, covering
hundreds of kilometres. Some species live 70 or 80 years.
They're diet consists of squid, small fish and krill. They fly great
distances searching for food and migrate up to 30,000 km from their
nesting sites.
Seabirds like albatrosses are unable to
cope with unnatural levels of mortality because they mature fairly late
in life (around 12 years of age for some species) and they only have
one young each year or every second year. As well, partners mate for
life and if one partner is lost to long-line fishing then it may take
many years for the surviving partner to find a new mate and re-commence
breeding.
Grey-headed Albatross
Grey-headed albatross
|
Grey-headed albatross (Diomedea chrysostoma) have a 2.2 metre wingspan,
a white body, a bluish grey head and neck, and a dark grey back and
tail.
They breed on sub-Antarctic islands, mainly in the South Atlantic
Black-brows and Grey-headed albatross have many similarities, and are
also known as mollymawks. They often breed together in vast hillside
colonies.
Grey-headed albatross generally breed every
two years: if a chick is successfully reared in one season, the parents
will not breed the next year.
Their lifespan is at least 36 years.
Black-browed albatross
Black-browed albatross courting
|
Black-browed
albatross (Diomedea melanophrys) are mostly white with yellowish-orange
webbed feet, grey highlights and a bright yellow beak. A conspicuous
black eyebrow gives them their name.
Even though the
Black-brows are one of the smallest alabatross species, an adult bird
is still 80-95cm in length, with a wing span of 210-250cm and weighs
three to five kilos. Black-browed albatross can live for 30 years or
more, and have a strong bond to their colony of birth.
They are found over Antarctic, Subantarctic and sub-tropical waters and
breed on Sub Antarctic and Antarctic islands. Eighty-five percent of
the global population of black-browed albatross (estimated at 680 000
pairs), nest in the Falkland Islands.
Satellite
tracking work with albatrosses over three seasons at Diego Ramirez
reveals that black-browed albatrosses forage from 57oS to about 39oS
over the narrow (10-15 mile wide) continental shelf, whereas
grey-headed albatrosses forage just off the continental shelf over a
huge area of the south-east Pacific Ocean, including deep into
Antarctic waters (67oS) and nearly half way to New Zealand.
Wandering Albatross
Wandering albatross
Photograph by Eric Woehler (Australian Antarctic Division )
|
Wandering albatross ( Diomedea exulans )
are the largest of the albatrosses and have a white head, neck and
body, a wedge-shaped tail, and a large pink beak. Juveniles have mostly
dark plumage, which gradually whitens with age.
Wandering albatross are found right across the Southern Ocean, including Antarctic, subantarctic and subtropical waters.
They breed only once every two years, on Sub-Antarctic and Antarctic
islands between 46° and 56°S such as Iles Kerguelen, South Georgia and
Macquarie Island.
With chicks consuming up to 100kg of
food during their rearing period, - which lasts for approximately 300
days - the task of incubating the half-kilogram egg and rearing the
chick is shared by both parents.
Foraging trips of
wandering albatross can last for 50 days at a time but tend to be much
shorter during the breeding season. Young birds will remain at sea for
5 to 10 years before returning to their natal island to breed.
Research shows that decreasing populations are due to the birds being caught in long-line fishing operations.