Diomedea immutabilis
TAXONOMY
Diomedea immutabilis Rothschild, 1893, Laysan Island. Monotypic.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
French: Albatros de Laysan; German: Laysanalbatros; Spanish:
Albatros de Laysan.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Wingspan 6.4–6.7 ft (195–203 cm); 5.3–9.0 lb (2.4–4.1 kg).
A slender white albatross, with underwing most similar to
D. melanophris, but with black patches at wrist and elbow. Distinctive
gray patch around eye and cheeks. Bill has yellowish
orange broad base, blending to pinker horn and then black at tip.
DISTRIBUTION
The most plentiful of the north Pacific albatrosses. Almost all
breed in the Hawaiian chain of islands with largest colonies at
Midway and Laysan Island. Tiny new populations at Mukojima
in Bonin Islands (west Pacific), and in eastern Pacific off Mexican
coast at Islas Guadalupe, Benedicto and Clarion. During
the breeding season regularly travels to the seas separating
Japan from the western Aleutians.
HABITAT
Marine, combined pelagic and coastal shelves, but rarely approaches
land except breeding islands.
BEHAVIOR
Colonies actively noisy during daylight with distinctive brays,
whistles, groans, and calls. Along with P. nigripes, has a wider
range of displays than other albatrosses. There are actively energetic
dances with birds circling about each other, walking
and standing and prancing on extreme tiptoe, swaying and
jousting motions of the head, combining with sideways lifting
bent-wing postures similar to all north Pacific albatrosses.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Mainly squid, but also fish and fish eggs, crustaceans and coelenterates.
Does not often follow ships. Undertakes a mix of
long and short foraging flights when chick rearing, to compensate
for far distant feeding locations.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Nest a scrape in ground, built up around rim by debris and
sand with one egg. Annual breeder laying between 20
November and 24 December. Incubation lasts an average of
64 days, with longest stints at beginning of incubation lasting
more than 3 weeks. Newly hatched chicks are guarded for
c. 27 days and are then left alone except for feeding visits until
fledging at c. 165 days. Productivity averages 64%, though
4–24% of chicks may die before fledging through dehydration,
starvation, or wandering into other territories to beg for
food. Only c. 14% of fledglings may survive to breed at 9
years, and adults have annual mortality of 5%.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not globally threatened with a world population of c. 607,000
breeding pairs, but some colonies may be decreasing. Drift
gill-netting in the north Pacific has been a major source of
mortality (17,500 in one year) and effects of longline fisheries
not yet known. Have recorded high levels of contaminants
which may affect breeding, as well as ingestion of plastic
rubbish.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Like the oceanic “wanderer” of the Southern Hemisphere
which has come to epitomize the albatross, so the “gooney” is
the common image of the albatross in the countries surrounding
the north Pacific.
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