News

The conservation status of the Falkland Islands Black-browed albatross could be down listed from endangered based on ground and aerial surveys carried out in 2010, ACAP* Coordinator Anton ...
We analyzed stomach contents of black-browed albatross chicks across eight breeding seasons (2004–2020) from New Island, Falkland Islands, to assess variation in discard consumption and how this ...
The Falkland Islands have the largest breeding population of black-browed albatross where the islanders know them as mollymawks. They nest in rocky, remote colonies, mate for life and produce just ...
The black-browed albatross is usually only found in the southern hemisphere – but occasionally they stray from their normal patterns and it was tracked flying south from an initial sighting in ...
Though almost empty of people, these same islands are incredibly popular places for seabirds, especially the black-browed albatross, a million of which are thought to nest across the Falklands.
A rookery of black-browed albatross nests at a windy, exposed tussac grassland on West Point Island in the Falkland Islands. (Dulcinea Groff Photo) Seabird populations in the South Atlantic and ...
September - Black-browed albatross and elephant seals return: Known locally as 'mollymawks', the black-browed albatross flock to the Falkland Islands this month to breed. Their return is heralded by ...
Lanting, along with writer Carl Safina, is currently immersed in the world's second-largest albatross breeding ground in the Falkland Islands, some 300 miles off the Atlantic coast of South America.
The lone suitor is a male black-browed albatross that hopes to find a mate on Sula Sgeir, a few hundred yards of rock isolated in the Atlantic 40 miles north-north-east of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides.
A black-browed albatross has been spotted on the East Yorkshire coast, thousands of miles away from its usual home. News of the rare arrival prompted hundreds of birdwatchers to travel to ...