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Albatross - Wikipedia Three albatross species, the black-footed albatross and the two sooty albatrosses, vary completely from the usual patterns and are almost entirely dark brown (or dark grey in places in the case of the light-mantled albatross) Albatrosses take several years to get their full adult breeding plumage [7]
Albatross | Largest Seabird, Migration Conservation | Britannica Albatross, (family Diomedeidae), any of more than a dozen species of large seabirds that collectively make up the family Diomedeidae (order Procellariiformes) Because of their tameness on land, many albatrosses are known by the common names mollymawk (from the Dutch for “foolish gull”) and gooney
ALBATROSS Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster The albatross is an exceedingly large seabird, having a wingspan as much as 11 feet across It is a magnificent glider, capable of staying aloft for hours at a time without flapping its wings, and tends to remain almost entirely at sea, typically coming ashore only to breed
Albatross facts | Birds | BBC Earth What types of albatrosses are there? There are 22 species of albatross Perhaps the most well-known member of the albatross family is the wandering albatross, also known as the snowy albatross This feathered giant has the largest wingspan of any bird on the planet – a whopping 3 5m
Albatross: Lifetime at Sea - U. S. Fish Wildlife Service Albatross can live decades and spend most of their long lives at sea When an albatross encounters a fishing vessel or is counted on the breeding grounds, these birds may be decades older than the people studying these magnificent gliders
Albatrosses | National Geographic An albatross aloft can be a spectacular sight These feathered giants have the longest wingspan of any bird—up to 11 feet! The wandering albatross is the biggest of some two dozen different
Albatross Bird Facts - Diomedeidae - A-Z Animals The albatross is a family of enormous seabirds that spend most of their time far away from land It differs from similar seabirds such as petrels and shearwaters by its physical size, skeletal structure, and the location of the tubes on the bill (along the side rather than the top)