Who is the world's oldest albatross? Wisdom is now catching up with the late Grandma! UPDATED

On 3 January 2010 the world's oldest known Laysan Albatross Phoebetria immutabilis, a banded female named "Wisdom", was sighted for the first time this breeding season on Midway Atoll National Wildlife Reserve in the USA's North-western Hawaiian Islands (click here for story).

 

Wisdom was observed in her usual location incubating an egg and is at least 59 years old .  She was banded as a breeding adult incubating an egg at the same locality on Midway by Chandler Robbins of the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, USA in December 1956.  Robbins estimated that the bird was a minimum of five years old at the time.  Last year Wisdom and her mate successfully fledged a chick.

laysan_albatross_wisdom_midway_by_usfws


The oldest known Laysan Albatross: "Wisdom" incubating on Midway.  She carries a red colour band (visible in the picture) with the number Z 333 that was fitted in 2006.  The original worn metal band was replaced in February 2002 by Chan Robbins.  Photograph by U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 

 

The oldest known albatross in the world appears to have been a banded Northern Royal Albatross Diomedea sanfordi which bred for many years at Taiaroa Head 

on the Otago Peninsula of South Island, New Zealand and was named "Grandma" (click here for information on the DVD on her life).  She reached a banded age of 51.5 years and an actual age of at least  60 years, regularly raising chicks until the year she disappeared.

 

Midway forms part of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, which has now been submitted for World Heritage status, to be considered later this year (click here).

 

Read about Wisdom's 2009 breeding session at  

http://www.fws.gov/pacific/migratorybirds/digitaljournal/albatrossjournal.html.  Scroll to: "Wisdom is Back! -- February 11, 2009".

 

Click here for an earlier news story on this web site.

 

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 29 March 2010

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.

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