Short-tailed albatross chick on Midway again


This video is called Short-tailed Albatross – Midway Atoll.

From the Chattanoogan in the USA:

Endangered Bird Produces A Chick On U.S. Soil For 2nd Time In History

posted January 23, 2012

For the second time ever recorded, an endangered Short-tailed Albatross has nested in the United States and produced a chick. The recent discovery of the nest and chick on Midway Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands follows the fledging of the first U.S.-born chick last year at the same site by the same parents.

“This is great news because it suggests that the first chick hatched last year was not an isolated incident. We may be seeing the early stages of the formation of a new population of this very rare bird,” said Dr. George Wallace, director of Oceans and Islands at American Bird Conservancy, the nation’s leading bird conservation organization.

“This would be a significant conservation development because it would reduce the likelihood that a catastrophic event on its main breeding island, Torishima, Japan, would wipe the species out.”

The Short-tailed Albatross was once the most abundant of the North Pacific albatross species, numbering more than a million birds. It was decimated by feather hunting at the turn of the 20th Century, and by the late 1940s was thought to be extinct. In the early 1950s, ten pairs were discovered breeding on the volcanic island of Torishima, Japan.

The population has now reached 3,000 individuals, with most on Torishima, but conservationists fear an eruption there could spell disaster. For the last five years, the Short-tailed Albatross Recovery Team, an international group of collaborators, has been working on establishing a new colony on Mukojima Island, also in Japan, which is safe from volcanic activity.

Midway Atoll is located more than 1,300 miles northwest of Honolulu, and consists of a circular barrier reef and several sand islets managed as Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. It is home to the world’s largest colonies of Laysan and Black-footed albatrosses, as well as millions of other seabirds.

55 miles from Midway, another Short-tailed Albatross pair is attempting breeding on Kure Atoll, the northern-most coral atoll in the world, where an apparent female-female pair built a nest last year. The State of Hawai‘i and the Kure Atoll Conservancy have been trying to restore the island so that it offers even higher quality habitat for nesting seabirds. Both Midway and Kure are part of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument designated by President George W. Bush in 2006.

A single Short-tailed Albatross was also observed on Laysan Island this winter, and over the years, individuals have made appearances on French Frigate Shoals and Pearl and Hermes, also in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands.

Outside the breeding season, the Short-tailed Albatross ranges along the coasts of eastern Russia, Korea, China, Taiwan, the Aleutian and Hawaiian Islands, and rarely off the Pacific Coast of North America south to California.

See also here.

Maybe ten rare Short-tailed Albatrosses showing up at several Hawaiian Islands doesn’t count as a new population, but those sightings are still causing a buzz in the conservation and birding worlds: here.

On Tuesday, January 31, International Bird Rescue’s Wildlife Center in Los Angeles will release a majestic Laysan Albatross back to its ocean home. The question remains: How did an exotic bird that thrives in North Pacific waters from Hawaii to Alaska arrive in California? Even more perplexing: How did this giant seabird, with a 6 foot 9 inch wingspan, make it into the bed of a local pickup truck? Here.

A black-browed albatross and its chick peer at the camera on the coast of Admiralty Sound, in Tierra del Fuego, Chile. Photo here.

New Zealannd albatrosses: here.