Shy Albatross

IUCN Near Threatened (NT)

About the Shy Albatross

About the Shy Albatross 

Identification

Shy Albatrosses are large, white seabirds with long wings and a dark grey tail. The head is mostly white, contrasting slightly with the sides of the face, which are pale grey; with excellent views, a dark and narrow eyebrow is also visible. Their wings are dark greyish above, while below they are mostly white, with narrow black margins. The bill is generally pale grey-green with a yellow tip. The feet are flesh coloured. Adult males and females appear similar. Juveniles are similar to adults, but with a grey hood.

Scientific name

  • Thalassarche cauta

Habitat

Location

Conservation status (IUCN)

Identification

Songs and Calls

Rapidly repeated croaking and a drawn-out wail are the main calls. Song recorded by Barry Edmonston from xeno-canto.

How to identify the Shy Albatross

A Shy Albatross flying over the water, positioned against the striking Sydney skyline.

IUCN Near Threatened (NT)

Albatrosses

Colour

  • Grey
  • White

Size

  • Very large (> 75 cm, eg: pelican)

Shape

  • Seagull

Songs & calls

Shy Albatross

The main song & call.

Credits to the owner/recorder.

Habitat & distribution

Shy Albatrosses are usually seen out in the open ocean, though they may be seen from observers looking out to sea from clifftops. They breed on rocky islands.

Distribution map

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Behaviour

Behaviour

Usually occur singly or in small groups, Shy Albatrosses are usually seen soaring low over the waves, using the updraft from each wave for lift. In calm conditions, they readily swim on the sea, where flocks may form.

They are often attracted to foraging whales and the wake of longliners and trawlers to attack baited hooks or scavenge fisheries discards.

Feeding

Feeding

Shy Albatrosses mainly eat squid, octopuses and fish, seizing them from the water’s surface, though sometimes they also swim below the surface in pursuit of marine prey.

They often forage with other species of albatrosses as well as whales, and regularly haunt the wake of fishing boats.

Breeding

Breeding

Shy Albatrosses nest in dense colonies on offshore islands. Their nests comprise a conical mound of mud and guano, lined with soft material.

They lay a single white egg, which is incubated by both parents in alternating shifts, and the nestling is fed by both parents.

Conservation

IUCN Near Threatened (NT)

  • EX
  • EW
  • CR
  • EN
  • VU
  • NT
  • LC
  • DD

IUCN status reflects the conservation status of this species globally.

Threats to the species

  1. Climate change

    Long-term changes in temperature, rainfall, sea levels, and extreme weather that alter habitats, food availability, breeding success, and survival. 
  2. Invasive species

    Non-native plants, animals, or pathogens that negatively affect native species through competition, predation, habitat alteration, or disease. Includes predation by foxes, cats, rats, and even Australian animals that have been translocated (eg:  Sugar Gliders in Tasmania). 
  3. Pollution

    Contamination of air, water, or land by harmful substances such as chemicals, plastics, oil, heavy metals, or agricultural runoff. 

Conservation