







| Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANIMALIA | CHORDATA | AVES | Procellariiformes | Diomedeidae |
| Scientific Name: | Thalassarche cauta | |||
| Species Authority: | (Gould, 1841) | |||
Common Name/s:
|
||||
| Taxonomic Notes: | Diomedea cauta (Sibley and Monroe 1990, 1993) has been split into cauta, eremita and salvini following Brooke (2004) and steadi following Robertson and Nunn (1998) and ACAP (2006)5,18, and all placed in the genus Thalassarche following Brooke (2004). | |||
| Red List Category & Criteria: | Near Threatened ver 3.1 | |||||||||||||||
| Year Assessed: | 2008 | |||||||||||||||
| Assessor/s | BirdLife International | |||||||||||||||
| Evaluator/s: | Butchart, S. (BirdLife International Red List Authority), Small, C. & Sullivan, B. (BirdLife International Global Seabird Programme) | |||||||||||||||
|
Justification: This species breeds on just three islands. It may be susceptible to stochastic events and human activities, although one nesting site is moderately widely separated from the other two. For this reason it is treated as Near Threatened. |
||||||||||||||||
| History: |
|
|||||||||||||||
| Population: |
The global population of Shy Albatross is estimated to be 12,000 to 13,000 pairs. Data submitted to ACAP in 2005 estimated a total population of 12,750 pairs, made up of 5,128 pairs on Albatross Island (2004), 7,258 -7,458 pairs on Mewstone (1996), and 268 pairs on Pedra Branca (1996). Data from Albatross Island in 2006-2007 indicate 5,017 pairs (ACAP 2006). The number of mature individuals is therefore estimated at c.25,500. The global population including non-breeders is estimated to be 50,000-60,000 individuals (Gales 1998).
|
| Population Trend: |
Unknown
|
| Habitat and Ecology: | Shy Albatross breeds annually in colonies located on rock islands. The main foods are fish and cephlapods20, with crustaceans and tunicates also forming a part of the diet. It is a ship-follower and fish processing discharge comprises a significant proportion of its diet. Nests are a mound of soil, grass and roots. Eggs are mostly laid in the second half of September1. |
| Systems: | Marine |
| Major Threat(s): | Although 'shy-type' albatrosses, (thought largely to be T. cauta) comprised over 12% of seabirds caught by Japanese tuna longliners in Australian waters during 1989-1995 (up to 900 birds per year)3, Japanese fishing effort ceased in 1997 and the current domestic effort is concentrated in northern waters where the likelihood of encountering albatrosses is much lower17. Currently, there is limited overlap between the distribution of adult shy albatrosses and Australian longline fishing effort (although the impact of trawl fisheries is unknown). However, juvenile birds from the Mewstone population are known to traverse the Indian Ocean and forage in waters off South Africa, which brings them into contact with several fisheries that pose a greater bycatch threat17. At the small Pedra Branca colony, interaction with the Australasian Gannet (Morus serrator)(which is increasing across its range) is thought to be the primary cause of the observed rapid declines in the number of chicks produced each year at that colony, and extreme weather conditions may also reduce breeding success on the island15. Avian pox virus has been recorded in chicks on Albatross Island (Tasmania) and has the potential to impact population trends through negative impacts to breeding success22. |
| Conservation Actions: |
Conservation actions underway: CMS Appendix II and ACAP Annex 1. Currently disturbance and access issues prevent similar studies on Pedra Branca and the Mewstone. Conservation actions proposed: Analysis of aerial census data and maintenance of current programme for Pedra Branca and the Mewstone (due to logistic difficulties demographic studies of populations on Pedra Branca and the Mewstone population are not feasible). Promote the adoption of a) monitoring of seabird bycatch associated with longline and trawl fishing and b) best-practice mitigation measures in all fisheries within the species's range, including via intergovernmental mechanisms such as ACAP, the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission and FAO. Mewstone birds appear to travel more extensively that Albatross Island birds and are therefore exposed to interactions with a range of fishing fleets. |
| Citation: | BirdLife International 2008. Thalassarche cauta. In: IUCN 2009. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 09 February 2010. |
| Disclaimer: | To make use of this information, please check the <Terms of Use>. |
| Feedback: | If you see any errors or have any questions or suggestions on what is shown on this page, please fill in the feedback form so that we can correct or extend the information provided |