animals

Orphaned Fruit Bat

Meet Lil' Drac, a short-tailed fruit bat taken in by Bat World Sanctuary, an organization with a mission that includes promoting the prote...

12 Dec 2011 | 0 comments | Read more

Blind Kitten Playing With Toy

Some cats happen to be born handicapped, some other have encountered injuries or the degenerative issues of aging. Any handicapped kitty c...

22 Nov 2011 | 1 comments | Read more
Food and Recipes

Healthy Family Meal - Sloppy Joes

Ingredients1 pound extra-lean ground beef 1 onion, diced 4 cloves garlic, minced 1 jalapeno, minced 1 red pepper, diced 1 can small re...

24 Jan 2012 | 0 comments| Read more

Rose From Bacon

The easiest and quickest recipe ever ... also the most delicious of all those who love roses and bacon. ...

23 Apr 2011 | 0 comments| Read more

Contaminants In Our Food Supply

It’s one of the public health’s top ten goals for the 20th century, creating a safer, more toxic-free food supply, but meanwhile virtually ...

06 Mar 2011 | 0 comments| Read more

Mutants - Which Can Be Eaten

Mutants are found everywhere, even among the fruits and vegetables you ever come across such snacks? ...

02 Mar 2011 | 0 comments| Read more

Health and Wellness

green

Zero Energy Home

Bird Island is a spectacular urban vitality project this really is currently being created in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Created by Graft Lab...

01 Feb 2012 | 0 comments| Read more

Stunning Green Views

Photos of the area taken from a height. Stunning views) ...

04 May 2011 | 0 comments| Read more

Canadian Green River Park

It happened on December 29, 2010 in a Canadian park Goldstream. Local river water suddenly stained neon green. Ofigevshie people rubbing ...

12 Jan 2011 | 0 comments| Read more

Bora Bora

Bora Bora is an island in the Leeward group of the Society Islands of French Polynesia, an overseas collectivity of France in the Pacific O...

24 Dec 2010 | 0 comments| Read more
Garden Tips

Live Your Bonsai Style

In Japanese, bonsai can be literally translated as 'tray planting' but since originating in Asia, so many centuries ago - it ha...

24 Jan 2012 | 0 comments| Read more
green lifestyle

The Beirut Wonder Forest

The Beirut Wonder Forest is definitely an impressive suggestion that wishes to convert the Lebanese capital towards a luxurious eco-friendl...

21 Dec 2011 | Read more
Healthy Life

Healthy Living Books

Well being and healthy living can be achieved with the right information  from someone who has experience in helping others learn how...

24 Jan 2012 | Read more
Garden and Nature

The End Is Near - Extreme Weather Anomalies

Here, in the non-tropical Northern Hemisphere, we have come to divide the year into four seasons: the cold of winter, the warming and gre...

16 Jul 2011 | Read more
animals

Orphaned Fruit Bat

Meet Lil' Drac, a short-tailed fruit bat taken in by Bat World Sanctuary, an organization with a mission that includes promoting the prote...

12 Dec 2011 | Read more
Green Garden

Rhine Waterfalls

Rhine Waterfalls symbolize big blur of rushing water. It requires a while for your eye to make out from where the waterfall begins and fin...

31 Jan 2012 | Read more
Garden

Garden Of Eden - Greenhouse Project

Eden project - is not only an outstanding piece of architecture, astonishing audiences with their appearance, but also the world's larges...

28 Mar 2011 | Read more
Eco-Friendly

Amazing Eco-Friendly Buildings From the Future

Buildings From Another WorldWe all have our own vision of what the future will look like. Whether it be cars in the sky, living on Mars or ...

17 Apr 2012 | Read more
Pictures

500-pound Bear - The Closest Friend

500-pound bear has become Edgy closest friend for 60-year-old trainer from Canada, Mark Dumas. All his spare time, Mark and Edgy spend toge...

02 Jul 2011 | Read more

Plastic Kill Thousands Of Albatross Chicks

These photographs of albatross chicks were made in September, 2009, on Midway Atoll, a tiny stretch of sand and coral near the middle of the North Pacific. The nesting babies are fed bellies-full of plastic by their parents, who soar out over the vast polluted ocean collecting what looks to them like food to bring back to their young. On this diet of human trash, every year tens of thousands of albatross chicks die on Midway from starvation, toxicity, and choking.







To document this phenomenon as faithfully as possible, not a single piece of plastic in any of these photographs was moved, placed, manipulated, arranged, or altered in any way. These images depict the actual stomach contents of baby birds in one of the world's most remote marine sanctuaries, more than 2000 miles from the nearest continent.


Albatrosses, of the biological family Diomedeidae, are large seabirds  allied to the procellariids, storm-petrels  and diving-petrels in the order Procellariiformes (the tubenoses). They range widely in the Southern Ocean and the North Pacific. They are absent from the North Atlantic, although fossil remains show they once occurred there too and occasional vagrants turn up.


Albatrosses are amongst the largest of flying  birds, and the great albatrosses (genus Diomedea) have the largest wingspans of any extant  birds. The albatrosses are usually regarded as falling into four genera, but there is disagreement over the number of species.


Albatrosses are highly efficient in the air, using dynamic soaring and slope soaring to cover great distances with little exertion. They feed on squid, fish and krill by either scavenging, surface seizing or diving. Albatrosses are colonial, nesting for the most part on remote oceanic islands, often with several species nesting together. Pair bonds between males and females form over several years, with the use of 'ritualised dances', and will last for the life of the pair. A breeding season can take over a year from laying to fledging, with a single egg laid in each breeding attempt.


Of the 21 species of albatrosses recognised by the IUCN, 19 are threatened with extinction. Numbers of albatrosses have declined in the past due to harvesting for feathers, but today the albatrosses are threatened by introduced species such as rats and feral cats that attack eggs, chicks and nesting adults; by pollution; by a serious decline in fish stocks in many regions largely due to overfishing; and by long-line fishing. Long-line fisheries pose the greatest threat, as feeding birds are attracted to the bait, become hooked on the lines, and drown. Identified stakeholders such as governments, conservation organisations and people in the fishing industry are all working toward reducing this bycatch.


Albatrosses are colonial, usually nesting on isolated islands; where colonies are on larger landmasses, they are found on exposed headlands with good approaches from the sea in several directions, like the colony on the Otago Peninsula in Dunedin, New Zealand. Many Buller's Albatrosses and Black-footed Albatrosses nest under trees in open forest.  Colonies vary from the very dense aggregations favoured by the mollymawks (Black-browed Albatross colonies on the Falkland Islands have densities of 70 nests per 100 m²) to the much looser groups and widely spaced individual nests favoured by the sooty and great albatrosses. All albatross colonies are on islands that historically were free of land mammals. Albatrosses are highly philopatric, meaning they will usually return to their natal colony to breed. This tendency to return to their point of origin to breed is so strong that a study of Laysan Albatross showed that the average distance between hatching site and the site where a bird established its own territory was 22 m (72 ft).


Like most seabirds, albatrosses are K-selected with regard to their life history, meaning they live much longer than other birds, they delay breeding for longer, and invest more effort into fewer young. Albatrosses are very long lived; most species survive upwards of 50 years, the oldest recorded being a Northern Royal Albatross that was ringed  as an adult and survived for another 51 years, giving it an estimated age of 61.  Given that most albatross ringing projects are considerably younger than that, it is thought likely that other species will prove to live that long and even longer.


 












Posted by Admin on 8:23 AM. Filed under , , , , , , , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0

0 comments for Plastic Kill Thousands Of Albatross Chicks

Leave comment

Photo Gallery