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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AlbatrossAlbatross - Wikipedia

    The name "Albatross" is derived from the Arabic al-qādūs or al-ḡaṭṭās (a pelican; literally, "the diver"), which travelled to English via the Portuguese form Alcatraz ("gannet"), which is also the origin of the name of the former prison Alcatraz.The Oxford English Dictionary notes that the word Alcatraz was originally applied to the frigatebird; the modification to albatross was ...

  2. An albatross aloft can be a spectacular sight. These feathered giants have the longest wingspan of any bird—up to 11 feet! The wandering albatross is the biggest of some two dozen different species.

  3. Jul 24, 2020 · There are 23 species of albatrosses, though arguably the most famous is the wandering albatross ( Diomedea exulans ), which is the largest flying bird in the world. This bird has a 11-foot (3.4 ...

  4. The wandering albatross (D. exulans) has the largest wingspread among living birds—to more than 340 cm (11 feet).The adult is essentially like the royal albatross. It nests on islands near the Antarctic Circle and on some islands in the South Atlantic, and in the nonbreeding season it roams the southern oceans north to about 30° S.. The Amsterdam albatross (D. amsterdamensis) has a ...

  5. May 31, 2024 · An albatross is a large, magnificent seabird capable of soaring incredible distances without rest. Long viewed with superstitious awe by sailors, they spend most of their time gliding over the ...

  6. Description of the Albatross. These birds are incredibly large, and have immense wingspans. The largest species, the wandering Albatross, has a wingspan of 12 ft. across! For birds with such large wings, they are surprisingly lightweight. At their heaviest, most Albatrosses weigh no more than 25 lbs. or so.

  7. The snowy albatross and the southern royal albatross are the largest of the albatrosses and are among the largest of flying birds. They have the largest wingspans of any bird, being up to 3.5 m (11 ft) from tip to tip, although the average is a little over 3 m (9.8 ft).

  8. Albatrosses can cover 16,000 kilometres in a single foraging trip. And they can travel almost 1,000 km per day without flapping their wings! They do this by using their enormous wings to ride the ocean winds. Albatrosses’ far-ranging foraging behaviour puts them in the path of fishing vessels around the world, where thousands of albatrosses ...

  9. They drink seawater and usually eat squid. Albatrosses come ashore only to breed, in colonies typically established on remote oceanic islands. Adults of common species attain wingspans of 7–11 ft (200–350 cm). Albatrosses live long and may be among the few birds to die of old age. They were once held in awe by seamen, who held that killing ...

  10. www.audubon.org › bird-family › albatrossesAlbatrosses | Audubon

    Learn about the amazing adaptations and conservation challenges of albatrosses, the largest flying birds in the world, with Audubon's bird family guide.

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