The 'Tristan Albatross' (''Diomedea dabbenena'') is a large
seabird from the
albatross family. One of the
great albatrosses of the
genus ''
Diomedea'', it was only recognised by some authorities as a full
species in 1998. While not all scientists believe it is a full species, retaining it as a
subspecies, the Wandering Albatross, a 2004 study of the
mitochondrial DNA of the Wandering Albatross
species complex supported the split. Other studies have shown it to be the most
genetically distinct member of the Wandering superspecies. It is, however, practically indistinguishable from the Wandering Albatross at sea; the Tristan Albatross is smaller and has a slightly darker back. Due to the difficulty in distinguishing them from Wandering Albatrosses, their distribution at sea is still not fully known, but the use of satellite tracking has shown that they forage widely in the South
Atlantic, with males foraging west of the breeding islands towards
South America and females to the east towards
Africa. At sea, they feed mostly on
squid, particularly from the family
Histioteuthidae.
The Tristan Albatrosses are
endemic to the islands of the
Tristan da Cunha group and
Gough Island. The majority of the world's population nest of Gough, around 1500 pairs. There are also colonies on
Inaccessible Island. They were formerly threatened by
introduced species, rats, cats and pigs, but these have now been
removed from their breeding islands. Today the main threat to the species is believed to be
long-line fishing.
References
★ Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is endangered
★ Brooke, M. (2004). ''Albatrosses And Petrels Across The World'': Procellariidae. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK ISBN 0-19-850125-0
★ Burg, T.M., & Croxall, J.P., (2004) "Global population structure and taxonomy of the wandering albatross species complex". ''Molecular Ecology'' '13': 2345-2355.
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