About Diomedea antipodensis C.J.R.Robertson & Warham, 1992
Diomedea antipodensis, commonly called the Antipodean albatross, is a large albatross that reaches 110 cm (43 in) in total length. Adults have brown and white breeding plumage, while juvenile birds resemble snowy albatrosses in appearance. Breeding females have brown upperparts with fine white wavy vermiculations on the back. Their face, throat, lower breast, and belly are white, their undertail coverts are brown, and their underwings are mostly white with a dark tip. A small number of individuals, especially immature birds and females, have a dusky tip on the lower mandible of the bill, and can even show a dark cutting edge along the upper mandible. This appearance matches that of the Amsterdam Island albatross, particularly when the bird is viewed in strong backlighting. Breeding males are overall whiter than breeding females, but are not as white as snowy albatrosses. Both sexes have a pink bill. Females of the nominate subspecies have a dark brown breast band. Compared to the subspecies D. a. gibsoni, nominate males have a darker cap, darker tail, and darker humeral flexure. At sea, Antipodean albatrosses range across the South Pacific Ocean, extending from Australia east as far as Chile, and occurring in all waters south of the Tropic of Capricorn. The subspecies D. a. gibsonii generally ranges to the east of Auckland Island, while the nominate subspecies ranges further east all the way to Chile. This albatross breeds on the Auckland Islands, Antipodes Islands, and Campbell Island.