Overview
Black-browed Albatross: White head, neck, underparts, and black back, tail. Yellow bill with red tip, pale pink-gray legs and feet. Easily identified by black tail, stiff wing beats and long narrow pointed wings. Soars effortlessly for long periods of time, may circle and glide for long distances.
Range and Habitat
Black-browed Albatross: This species is common on the open sea in all oceans south of the equator, but rarely enters the Northern Hemisphere. During breeding, they can be found on twelve islands, including the Falklands, Macquarie Island, and McDonald Island. It occurs casually off the Atlantic Coast of North America. These birds prefer to nest on slopes or cliffs overlooking ocean.
Albatross (Diomedeidae)
ORDER
There are four families in the PROCELLARIIFORMES (pronounced pro-sel-lehr-EYE-ih-FOR-meez), an order that includes seabird families such as storm-petrels, shearwaters and the giant albatrosses.
FAMILY TAXONOMY
There are twenty-one species of albatrosses in four genera in the family Diomedeidae (die-uh-med-EYE-dee), a bird family distributed throughout the oceans of the world, less so in the North Atlantic.
NORTH AMERICA
In North American waters, eight species of albatross in four genera have been recorded. These include the dark-plumaged Black-footed Albatross, the huge Wandering Albatross and the endangered Short-tailed Albatross.
KNOWN FOR
Albatrosses are known for their sea-faring abilities; their long, thin wings enabling them to remain airborne without flapping for very long periods of time. The Wandering Albatross is known for having the longest wingspan of any living bird; measurements of up to twelve feet from wingtip to wingtip have been noted in this master of flight.
PHYSICAL
Albatrosses are large birds with short tails, medium length necks and very long, thin wings. They have large, strong bills that, like other Procellariiformes, have tube-like structures to excrete excess salt water. Perfectly suited to their marine environment, members of this family also have webbed feet.
COLORATION
North American albatrosses are mostly white and black in coloration. Apart from the dark colored Black-footed Albatross and dark juvenile plumages, adult albatross species are mostly white, some with dark markings on the face and dark plumage on the back or in the wings. Brighter colors such as yellow or pink occur in the bills of some species.
GEOGRAPHIC HABITAT
A family primarily distributed in the Southern Hemisphere, most species on the North American list have been recorded as vagrants. Nevertheless, of regular occurrence off the west coast of North America are the three species that breed in the Northern Hemisphere; the fairly common Laysan and Black-footed Albatrosses and the rare Short-tailed Albatross. All albatross species nest on isolated, oceanic islands and are pelagic birds of the deep waters rarely seen from shore.
MIGRATION
Although albatross species don’t undertake annual migrations based on the seasons, after the breeding season, they disperse widely with young birds remaining on the open ocean for three or more years.
HABITS
Albatrosses nest in colonies and form strong pair bonds during the breeding season, but are solitary birds of the open seas at other times. Although they will take carrion on land while breeding, most foraging takes place on the surface of the water for fish, squid, and offal.
CONSERVATION
All albatross species are endangered or threatened; the Laysan and Black-footed Albatrosses of the North Pacific being the least threatened. Long-line fishing, a type of commercial fishing that uses mile-long cables with hundreds of individual hooked lines spaced out along their length, drowns opportunistically-feeding birds that take the baited hooks as they are being reeled out and thus poses the largest threat to most Albatross species. Albatrosses are also susceptible to depredation by rats and other disturbances to their fragile nesting grounds. As large, long-lived birds that take years to reach maturity, they take a long time to rebuild their populations because of their low reproductive rate.
INTERESTING FACTS
Albatross species have two methods of gliding flight that help them fly for long periods without wasting energy by flapping their wings; slope soaring and dynamic soaring. In slope soaring, the bird allows the wind to lift it up and then glides down at an angle to move forward. In dynamic soaring, the bird actually uses the wind that comes off of the waves for lift. For these reasons, albatrosses are mostly restricted to the windy, wavy seas of the Southern Hemisphere.