Buller’s, Chatham and Salvin’s Albatrosses in Peruvian waters

 Bullers Albatross museum specimens Patricia Latas

Buller's Albatross, artwork by Pat Latas

Javier Quiñones (Oficina de Investigaciones en Depredadores Superiores, Instituto del Mar del Peru, Callao, Peru) and colleagues have published in the journal Pacific Science on at-sea observations of three mollymawk albatrosses Thalassarche in the coastal waters of Peru.

The paper’s abstract follows:

“Three albatross species occur in Peru that nest in New Zealand offshore islands: Salvin’s (Thalassarche salvini), Buller’s (T. bulleri ssp.), and Chatham albatross (T. eremita). To determine their spatial distribution, relative abundances, and foraging behavior in Peru, we conduct two surveys coinciding their wintering time in the austral autumn and spring 2019. The study area was from 06° S to 18° S and from the coastline to 100 nautical miles (nm) offshore. We recorded 483.7 hours of observation while surveying 7,678 km², recording 249, 200, and 22 individuals of Salvin’s, Buller’s, and Chatham albatrosses, respectively. Salvin’s occupied shallower waters along the continental shelf-break in the northern and central regions (07°–12° S), while Buller’s and Chatham’s preferred oceanic waters in southern regions (12°–17° S). Salvin’s greatest abundance was during autumn (April–June) when adults dominated (85.7%) and shifted to the north. In spring (October–December), the Salvin’s abundance was lower and dominated by subadults (62.5%) shifting to the south. Conversely, Buller’s greatest abundance was in spring, with similar age-classes to those of Salvin’s, while in autumn a lower abundance was observed and adults dominated (>85%). Chatham’s adults (80%) were abundant in autumn, while in spring Chatham’s were very few (n = 3 total observations). According to a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Correspondence Analysis (CA), Salvin’s were positively associated with higher sea temperature and salinity, lower latitudes, and shallower depths. Buller’s and Chatham’s were associated with greater shelfbreak distance and wind velocity. Salvin’s presence in Peru could primarily originate from birds coming from the Western Chain in The Snares. We suggest that adult Buller’s seen in autumn, probably originate from the Chatham Islands, while those in spring probably originate from The Snares. Salvin’s were spatially associated with cephalopods and Buller’s and Chatham’s with fishes. The two latter species were attracted to offal discards of small-scale fisheries.”

Reference:

Quiñones, J., Alegre, A., Romero, C., Manrique, M. & Vásquez, L. 2021.  Fine-scale distribution, abundance, and foraging behavior of Salvin’s, Buller’s, and Chatham Albatrosses in the Northern Humboldt Upwelling System.  Pacific Science 75: 1-21.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 20 April 2011

The Agreement on the
Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels

ACAP is a multilateral agreement which seeks to conserve listed albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters by coordinating international activity to mitigate known threats to their populations.

About ACAP

ACAP Secretariat

119 Macquarie St
Hobart TAS 7000
Australia

Email: secretariat@acap.aq
Tel: +61 3 6165 6674