About Phoebastria albatrus (Pallas, 1769)
The short-tailed albatross, scientifically named Phoebastria albatrus (Pallas, 1769), is a medium-sized albatross. It has a wingspan of 215 to 230 cm (85–91 in), a body length of 84 to 94 cm (33–37 in), and a body weight ranging from 4.3 to 8.5 kg (9.5–18.7 lb). Standard measurements for the species are as follows: the bill measures 12.7–15.2 cm (5.0–6.0 in) long, the tail measures 14–15.2 cm (5.5–6.0 in) long, the tarsus measures around 10 cm (3.9 in), and the wing chord measures 51 cm (20 in). Adult short-tailed albatrosses have an overall white plumage, with black flight feathers, some coverts, and a black terminal bar on the tail. They have a yellow-stained nape and crown. Their bill is large and pink, and older individuals develop a blue tip on the bill. Juveniles are entirely brown all over, and gradually become whiter as they mature over a period of 10 to 20 years. It can be told apart from the two other albatross species that share its range—Laysan albatross and black-footed albatross—by its larger size, pink bill with a bluish tip, and specific plumage details. Contrary to its common name, its tail is not shorter than the tails of Laysan or black-footed albatrosses, and it is actually longer than the tail of the waved albatross, another member of the genus Phoebastria. Currently, short-tailed albatrosses nest on four islands. The majority of the population nests on Tori-shima, and almost all remaining nesting birds are found on Minami-kojima in the Senkaku Islands. A female-female pair started nesting on Kure in the late 2000s, and a chick hatched on 14 January 2011 on Midway. Both Kure and Midway are located in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. In 2012, a pair began incubating an egg on Muko-jima, which is part of Japan’s Bonin Islands. During the non-breeding season, the species ranges across the North Pacific. Males and juveniles gather in the Bering Sea, while females feed off the coast of Japan and eastern Russia. Individuals can be found as far east as California. Short-tailed albatross is listed on a number of U.S. state endangered species lists, including Washington’s. The species no longer breeds as a result of extirpation at Kita-no-shima, Enewetak Atoll, Kobishi, and multiple sites in the Bonin Islands (Nishino Shima, Yomejima, and Mukojima, until very recently). It also formerly bred on Bermuda during the Pleistocene epoch. Historically, this albatross preferred to nest in large open areas near stands of the grass Miscanthus sinensis. Short-tailed albatrosses usually begin breeding for the first time when they reach 10 years of age. A clutch contains one dirty white egg marked with red spots that are mostly concentrated at the egg’s blunt end. The egg typically measures 116 by 74 millimetres (4.6 in × 2.9 in), and incubation lasts around 65 days. Both sexes share incubation duties.