An Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross flies past Gough Island. Soft pastels on Pastelmat by Deepti Jain of Artists & Biologists Unite for Nature (ABUN) for World Albatross Day 19 June 2026 and its theme of “Habitat Restoration”, after photographs by Chris Jones and Laurie Smaglick Johnson
In an important review, Ioannis Kalaitzakis (Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy) and many colleagues have published in the open access journal Conservation Science and Practice identifying invasive predators (cats and rodents) as the largest threats faced on land by Atlantic pelagic seabirds. Gough Island in the South Atlantic, which supports five ACAP-listed albatrosses and petrels, is given a high priority for action due to its seabird-killing House Mice Mus musculus. The mice are still present after an unsuccessful eradication effort in 2021.
However, the paper contains some misleading and incorrect errors in relation to the Tristan-Gough group of islands (that it refers to ‘as “Tristan & Gough”). Most significantly, the publication lists feral cats as a threat requiring removal from the main island of Tristan da Cunha, yet in fact they have not occurred there for half a century The feral population is believed to have died out around the time the whole domestic cat population of 54 animals was shot by the island’s medical doctor, who reported them as a human health risk from toxoplasmosis in February 1974 (Richardson 1984).
I also take issue with the statement “Furthermore, although mice are currently the most impactful alien predator across [my emphasis] this archipelago …”. Mice do not occur on Nightingale or Inaccessible Islands (and never have), there is no evidence they are a problem for birds on Tristan (likely suppressed by the island’s introduced Black Rats Rattus rattus) so it is only on Gough that they are an “impactful predator”.
The publication is correct in stating that the Vulnerable Spectacled Petrel Procellaria conspicillata is to endemic to the island group, but including it in the same sentence with the equally endemic Critically Endangered Tristan Albatross Diomedea dabbenena , Endangered Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross Thalassarche chlororhynchos and Endangered Atlantic Petrel Pterodroma incerta of Gough Island, where they are all at risk to mice (as are the other seabird species on the island), is a little misleading. The Spectacled Petrel breeds only on Inaccessible Island, which has never supported introduced populations of cats or rodents.
The Tristan-Gough group is made up of four islands and several islets on which seabirds breed. These islands fall under differing conservation regulations and management regimes, and their seabird (and landbird) species compilations vary. For example, the main island is the only one with a permanent human population, Inaccessible and Gough are nature reserves with a combined management plan, they together form a World Heritage Site, whereas Nightingale has no conservation status. As I have shown, the alien mammal populations vary, with two islands being free of them. However, the group’s islands and islets do fall under a single management authority, the Tristan da Cunha Conservation Department in terms of the 2006 Tristan da Cunha Conservation Ordinance.
The paper’s abstract follows:
“Seabirds are exposed to numerous threats throughout their life-cycles, including land-based threats during their breeding season such as invasive species, diseases, or light pollution. Here we assess the timing, scope, and severity of land-based threats to populations of highly mobile petrels, albatrosses, storm-petrels, and alcids in the Atlantic Ocean, to guide priorities for their conservation across their mostly island-breeding areas. By combining our own field expertise of these species with a literature review, we built a dataset characterizing 18 threats for 49 species across 38 Large Marine Ecosystems. We analyze this dataset by highlighting the most impactful threats and the most impacted regions. Addressing invasive alien species on Tristan da Cunha & Gough and on the islands of the Canary Current are the interventions with the greatest potential to stimulate seabird population recovery across the Atlantic Ocean. Our results highlight priorities for targeted management actions that can support seabird conservation.”
References:
Kalaitzakis, I., Rodrigues, A.S.L., Dias, M.P., Davies, T.E., Baran, M.A., Bhola, N., Boulinier, T., Bried, J., Campioni, L., Ceia, F.R., De Pascalis, F., Dehnhard, N., Fagundes, A.I., Gilg, O., González-Solís, J., Grémillet, D., Hernández-Montero, M., Krüger, L., Kuepfer, A. … Rouyer, M.-M. 2026. Assessment of land-based threats to Atlantic pelagic seabirds. Conservation Science and Practice 8(3). doi.org/10.1111/csp2.70249.
Richardson, M.E. 1984. Aspects of the ornithology of the Tristan da Cunha Group and Gough Island. Cormorant 12: 123-201.
John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses, 04 May 2026
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A Black-footed Albatross pair on Wake Atoll, photograph by Mark Rauzon
Laysan Albatrosses on Wake Atoll, photograph by Mark Rauzon
