The Amazing Albatrosses
They fly 50 miles per hour. Go years without touching land. Predict the weather. Mate for life. And they're among the world's most endangered birds. Can albatrosses be saved?
- By Kennedy Warne
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
And then they somehow find their way home—even when home is an outpost in the ocean like the Pyramid, not much bigger than an aircraft carrier. At the start of their breeding season, albatrosses have been tracked making almost ruler-straight trips from distant foraging areas to their nests. Because the birds maintain their course day and night, in cloudy weather and clear, scientists believe they use some kind of magnetic reckoning to fix their position relative to the earth's magnetic field.
The birds also seem able to predict the weather. Southern Buller's albatrosses were found to fly northwest if a low-pressure system, which produces westerly winds, was imminent, and northeast if an easterly wind-producing high-pressure system prevailed. The birds typically chose their direction 24 hours prior to the arrival of the system, suggesting they can respond to barometric cues.
In his autopsy room in Wellington, ornithologist Christopher Robertson slit open a plastic bag containing a white-capped albatross. The swan-sized carcass had been thawing for several days. Along with dozens of other seabirds in Robertson's freezers, this one had been collected at sea for the government's fisheries science program.
Robertson carefully unfolded the bird's wings—wings that would have carried it halfway around the world, between its breeding grounds in New Zealand's Auckland Islands and its feeding grounds in South African seas.
The albatross bore a raw wound at the elbow. Its feathers and skin had been rasped down to bare bone, presumably by the thick steel wires—called warps—that pull a trawl net. Of the 4,000 albatrosses and other seabirds Robertson's group has autopsied over nine years, nearly half have been killed by trawl fisheries, which use giant sock-shaped nets towed at depths of a quarter mile to capture 40 tons of fish in a single haul. (Albatrosses and other large, soaring birds tend to die as a result of collisions with the warps, while smaller, more agile fliers such as petrels and shearwaters are more likely to get ensnared in nets—to be crushed or drowned—while feeding.) The finding has surprised the fishing industry and conservation groups, which have considered longline fishing—in which thousands of baited hooks are fed out behind the fishing vessel—a greater threat to seabirds.
There are no reliable figures for the number of birds killed per year through contact with commercial fishing operations, but estimates for the Southern Ocean are in the tens of thousands. Vessels in well-regulated fisheries are required to minimize their impact on seabirds and report any accidental deaths, but there is a large shadow fleet of illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) vessels operating outside the regulations, answering to no one.
Many New Zealand fishers have adopted ingenious methods to reduce injuring and killing seabirds—or attracting them to boats in the first place (see sidebar, opposite). However, there is some evidence to suggest that fisheries may benefit albatross populations: a ready supply of discarded fish reduces competition for food between and within albatross species and provides an alternative food source to predatory birds such as skua, which often attack albatross chicks. Sagar and Stahl's research in the Snares Islands suggests that the free lunch boosts the number of chicks that fledge in a given year. They found that 70 percent of feedings brought by adult birds to their chicks contained discards from nearby fisheries.
Does this mean that fishing is a net benefit to seabird populations? Should the industry be given "a conservation award for the thousands of seabirds it supports," as one fisheries consultant gamely suggested to me?
Not at all, says Stahl. In albatrosses—long-lived, slow-maturing species that produce a single chick every one to two years—the long-term negative impact of adult death far outweighs the short-term benefit of chick survival. It may take three, four or even five successful chick rearings to compensate for the death of just one parent, says Stahl. He calculates that "even small increases in adult mortality can wipe out the benefit of tons of discards fed to chicks."
Although Scofield's tracking of Chatham albatrosses shows that they, too, frequent the same fishing grounds as deep-sea trawlers, not enough work has been done to compare the benefits of chick survival with the costs of adult deaths from fishing vessels. "We don't know the degree to which we're propping them up," says Scofield.
One albatross population that has unashamedly been propped up is the colony of endangered northern royal albatrosses at Taiaroa Head, near the city of Dunedin, on New Zealand's South Island. Taiaroa Head is one of the only places in the world where a visitor can get close to great albatrosses. The colony is tiny, with only 140 individuals, and the breeding effort is managed assiduously—"lovingly" would not be too strong a word.
Royal albatross chicks are nest-bound for nine months. Providing meals for these chicks is so demanding that the parents take a year off before breeding again. Lyndon Perriman, the senior ranger, described to me some of the ingenious techniques used to maximize reproductive success.
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Comments (8)
This bird is awesome, it is, to me one of the most spectacular creatures. I feel emotional to learn that it is endangered but the spirit and mood of the comments i've ready will no doubt transform into action to save this awesome creature. I have only seen the Albatross in photos but i shall make every effort to set my eyes on a live one and actually contribute anything geared towards aiding its survival. In kenya we don't have the suitable climate to be visited by the excellent bird.
Posted by Daniel Soore on September 28,2012 | 08:13 PM
It's just incredible how an article like this can infuse a whole lot of emotions in me for a bird whom I have never seen for real. Awesome article. It should be popularized to a degree that there is a campaign throughout the globe to save these majestic birds from getting extinct. Great work!
Posted by rohit on September 26,2012 | 03:17 PM
I lament: I'm a former US Navy sailor, 'Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club' member, West and South Pacific, 1970. I've seen with my own eyes the Albatross in the air and on the ground. I wrote one of my first poems, one about the Albatross, at that time. I've read and studied THE Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem, and I'm tortured between anger and sorrow about the fate of that most majestic bird. I hope, before I die, I can see at least one - soaring in the skies, with my own eyes once again.
Posted by David Harrington on April 1,2009 | 05:45 PM
You write lyrically and beautifully. I want to meet an albatross and it's entirely your fault!
Posted by Phoebe on February 1,2009 | 02:28 AM
Albatrosses really interest me. I love birds and I always bring books from the library to read about them. I've even seen an albatross on the beach once. I took a picture of it and now I'm studying albatrosses in school.
Posted by Lisa on November 1,2008 | 08:48 PM
We see them all time circling near surfside beach, though I have never seen one feed or land. They're really awesome to watch, fly.
Posted by kathy on September 5,2008 | 09:11 PM
wow
Posted by Barney on May 5,2008 | 11:18 PM
I am certain I saw a pair of large albatross(es) feeding on a fish at Galveston Beach, Texas, USA. It was about a month ago March, I believe. Please let me know of any sightings near shore in the Texas Gulf Coast. They were feeding together and nobody seemed to notice them. I sat for 30 minutes and observed them. They were magnificent when they flew off finally to sea. Note; We had been having strong Easterly breezes onshore for about a week at that time. Lissa
Posted by Lissa Ware on April 19,2008 | 08:14 PM