Albatross
The
albatrosses
(from
Portuguese
Alcatraz,
a
pelican)
are
seabirds
in
the
family
Diomedeidae,
which
is
closely
allied
to
the
petrels.
This
is
a
group
of
large
to
very
large
birds
with
very
long
narrow
wings.
The
beak
is
large,
strong
and
sharp-edged,
the
upper
mandible
terminating
in
a
large
hook.
The
feet
have
no
hind
toe,
and
the
three
anterior
toes
are
completely
webbed.
Albatrosses
travel
huge
distances
using
a
technique
used
by
many
long-winged
seabirds
called
dynamic
soaring.
This
enables
them
to
minimise
the
effort
needed
by
gliding
across
wave
fronts.
Their
principal
food
is
cephalopods.
Current
thinking
divides
the
albatrosses
into
four
genera:
- North
Pacific
albatrosses
(Phoebastria)
- Laysan
Albatross
P.
immutabilis
- Black-footed
Albatross
P.
nigripes
- Galapagos
Albatross
P.
irrorata
- Short-tailed
Albatross
P.
albatrus
- Great
albatrosses
(Diomedea)
- Royal
Albatross
D.
epomophora
- Wandering
Albatross
D.
exulans
- Amsterdam
Albatross
D.
amsterdamensis
- Mollymawks
(Thalassarche)
- Yellow-nosed
Albatross
T.
chlororhynchos
- Buller's
Albatross
T.
bulleri
- Shy
Albatross
T.
cauta
- Grey-headed
Albatross
T.
chrysostoma
- Black-browed
Albatross
T.
melanophris
- Sooty
albatrosses
(Phoebetria)
- Dark-mantled
Sooty
Albatross
P.
fusca
- Light-mantled
Sooty
Albatross
P.
palpebrata.
The
taxonomy
of
the
albatross
group
is
very
fluid
at
the
present
time.
The
American
Ornithological
Union
places
seabirds,
birds
of
prey
and
many
others
in
a
greatly
enlarged
order
Ciconiiformes,
whereas
in
Europe,
South
Africa,
Australia
and
New
Zealand,
the
more
traditional
Procellariiformes
is
retained.
Both
the
British
Ornithologists'
Union
and
the
South
African
authorities
split
the
albatrosses
into
four
genera
as
indicated
in
the
table.
(Ibis
(2002)
144
p707-710.)
The
name
Diomedea,
assigned
to
the
albatrosses
by
Linnaeus
references
the
mythical
metamorphosis
of
the
companions
of
the
Greek
warrior
Diomedes
into
birds.
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