Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThey’ve Done It Again: An Albatross Chick
To the delight of scientists, a pair of lovers returned to Midway this year for what might turn out to be an annual sojourn. The two birds are endangered short-tailed albatrosses, and for the second time in the species recorded history, they nested there, producing a chick on American soil.
Most short-tailed albatrosses breed on a volcanic island in Japan, and scientists hope they are seeing the beginning of a new breeding colony that could help ensure the species survival in the event of a catastrophic eruption.
Because the Japanese population is threatened, it certainly would be desirable for long-term species recovery to establish new populations, said George Wallace, the vice president for oceans and islands at the American Bird Conservancy.
Short-tailed albatrosses once numbered in the millions, making them the most abundant albatross species in the North Pacific. Feather hunters decimated the population around the turn of the century, however, and researchers believed by the 1940s that the species had gone extinct. In the 1950s, however, scientists discovered 10 breeding pairs on Japans Torishima Island, a group that has since grown to around 3,000.
http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/26/theyve-done-it-again-an-albatross-chick/
jpak
(41,757 posts)heh heh
I only have black-footed.
jpak
(41,757 posts)Black-browed
Royal
Wandering
Laysan
Gray headed
Light mantled sooty (my favorite)
Waved (very cool)
Black-footed
and a couple more - I think - my pelagic book has gone MIA
the rewards of oceanography
XemaSab
(60,212 posts)I'm doing okay in the pelagic department for North America, but not great.
I've only got the one albatross; I'm missing Short-tailed Shearwater and a few of the "expected" Atlantic shearwaters; storm petrels are pretty good; I've got one tropicbird and one frigatebird; I've got all the boobies; I've got all three phalaropes; I'm kicking ass in the gull department with Red-legged Kittiwake, Ross', and Ivory for CALIFORNIA; I've got all four skuas/jaegers; I've got all three puffins; and the less said about the rest of the alcids, the better.
jpak
(41,757 posts)I have all the puffins and a pile of alcids - including 30,000 dovkies - all at the same time.
all the tropic birds
all the phalaropes
all the arctic skuas and two antarctic and one Chilean skua - no great skua though.
and 9 penguins
I missed the one Ivory Gull because no one woke me up....grrrrrrr
If I ever spend any more time out West - I will clean up!