19 of the 21 species of albatross are threatened with extinction. To see how beautiful these birds are check out the videos in the albatross video thread.
For full information on the campaign please go to
http://www.savethealbatross.net
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Most albatrosses and several other seabird species are heading for extinction.
They are being unintentionally drowned in large numbers by "longline" fishing boats. Longlining is the single greatest threat to the world's seabirds. Much of it is carried out by "pirate" fishing boats.
BirdLife's Save the Albatross Campaign is trying to stop the needless slaughter of these magnificent birds by ensuring that relevant international agreements are implemented that will benefit both the birds and the legal fishing industry.
On the following pages find out about the problem, its solutions, BirdLife's Campaign and how you can help. You can also view photographs of some of the threatened species.
What is longlining?
In the 1980s, longlining became an increasingly popular method of fishing, partly in response to the increasing demand for high-quality, high-value fish destined for the clientele of upmarket restaurants.
Many nations have fishing vessels engaged in longlining, but the fisheries of particular concern are those targeting Southern Bluefin Tuna and Patagonian Toothfish. During line setting, longliners set a single line up to 130 km long behind the boat. Attached to it are literally thousands of baited hooks. An estimated 1 billion hooks are set annually by the world's longline fleets.
Some of the baited hooks are eaten not by their intended targets, but by albatrosses and other seabirds. The hooked birds are dragged under water and drown. Simple methods for reducing the number of birds caught are available and BirdLife's Campaign to Save the Albatross is seeking to ensure that these measures are used.
trosses and other seabirds often feed by scavenging for food behind fishing vessels and other boats, waiting for prey to be disturbed or scraps thrown overboard.
When longlining, fishing boats set thousands of baited hooks on a fishing line to catch fish. Seabirds scavenging behind these boats try to eat the bait from the hooks as they are set behind the boat. Some birds swallow the hooks and are dragged underwater and drown.
More than 300,000 seabirds are killed in this way each year. 26 species of seabird, including 17 species of albatrosses, are in danger of extinction because of the deaths caused by longlining.
Once set, the hooks are too deep for the birds to reach. To stop birds being needlessly killed, it is essential to stop them having the opportunity to swallow the baited hooks before they have sunk.
Many cheap and readily implemented solutions have been, and are being developed. Employing these will be of benefit to the fishermen themselves because the more bait eaten by birds, the smaller the catch of fish.
What are the solutions?
Practical measures
Practical measures
To prevent birds swallowing the baited hooks before they have sunk below their reach, many simple measures have been devised some of which are cheap and easy to implement. Examples include:
Towing bird-scaring (or tori) lines behind the vessel. These have plastic streamers tied to them that flap in the wind and scare birds away from the baited fishing line.
Using an underwater setting tube. These set the fishing line underwater out of reach of the birds.
Tying enough weights to the fishing line so that it sinks more quickly out of reach of the birds.
Using thawed not frozen bait as it sinks more quickly.
dying the bait blue. This puts birds off eating it.
setting lines at night. Most albatrosses feed mainly by day.
BirdLife believes measures like these should be as routine a part of longlining as the line itself, and international agreements have been developed to encourage their use.
Fisheries regulation
Several fisheries have international regulatory bodies. They set fishing quotas and limits and encourage the implementation of best fishing practices. (For example, The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) regulates fishing in Antarctic waters and requires the use of seabird mitigation measures.)
These regulatory bodies can introduce measures like setting fishery or vessel specific by-catch quotas or closing fisheries seasonally or temporarily to protect the economic interests of fishermen or particular wildlife (for example, to concentrate fishing to times of least impact to seabirds).
A key aspect of BirdLife's Campaign is to work with fisheries regulatory bodies to encourage the use of seabird mitigation measures.
Catch certification
BirdLife also recommends that fishing vessels should employ independent onboard scientific observers. These observers can monitor and assess the scale of seabird by-catch and train fishermen in the appropriate use of prevention measures.
Observers can also supervise the capture, packing and sealing of this legally caught fish and then issue a certificate stating its provenance and enabling it to be labelled as "albatross-friendly". Consumers then have the option to buy fish caught in this manner. Such a catch documentation scheme is in operation for legally caught Patagonian Toothfish in CCAMLR (Antarctic) waters.
Many fishing vessels operate illegally outside of the above agreements and regulations. These Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) or "pirate" fishing vessels, are responsible for killing thousands of seabirds each year.
Albatross Task Force
BirdLife wants to create a team of people across the world to work with fishermen on shore and at sea. (The Albatross Task Force was known as Operation Ocean Task Force until March 2006).
Spreading the word
Fishermen are often unaware of the simple, cost effective techniques that can - if used - rapidly reduce albatross deaths.
Dramatic results can be achieved by showing them how to use these techniques and telling them about how albatross numbers are declining.
There are observers on some boats to record seabird deaths from fishing, but there is a real shortage of a team of qualified at-sea instructors to train fishermen and get something practical done.
The Albatross Task Force will be that much needed team.
Going to extremes
This is no easy job. Our team will be prepared for:
Going to sea on commerical longline fishing boats in all weathers in some of the wildest oceans of the world
Using the right language and skills to build respect and credibility with fishing crews
Listening to fishermen's experience to feedback into the work
Convincing fishermen on how to use practical techniques that avoid albatrosses dying horrible deaths on hooks
Targeting problem fisheries, where we know lots of albatrosses and seabirds die
The ATF team will be managed by BirdLife Partner organisations around the world. It will be co-ordinated by the Global Seabird Programme from its headquarters at the RSPB (BirdLife in the UK)
Home: Sub-antarctic waters or nesting on the islands of South Georgia, ‘les Kerguelen, Heard, MacDonald and MacQuarie
Description: Mostly white with yellowish-orange webbed feet, very long wings, gray highlights, bright yellow beak
Of the 13 kinds of albatross, the black-browed albatross is one of the smallest. Despite being called "gooneys" or "mollymawks" by sailors because of their clutsy landings, albatrosses are amazing and beautiful in the sky. The black-browed albatross lives a roaming life over the sea, flying thousands of kilometers before setting foot on land, so being an excellent and efficient flyer is a must. Sometimes these birds will eat what they find floating about, or small squid and fish, but the black-browed albatross's primary food is krill, the tiny shrimp that baleen whales also call their favorite! The black-browed albatross will cover an area that spans 900km in diameter regularly looking for delicious krill!
When an albatross comes in for a landing, it will lower its webbed feet and use them like brakes to slow down its flight!
The black-browed albatross will make its nest of dirt and moss on small, rocky islands with millions of other Antarctic seabirds, like penguins! This makes for some crowded quarters. Although the albatross won't mind a rock hopper penguin right next to its nest, the other albatrosses better watch out. Black-browed albatrosses will keep their nests a regular distance apart -- 1.55m -- that's exactly how close they can get before making each other angry. Hey! Everybody needs their space!
Albatrosses will fly for miles without flapping their wings! They soar and glide on the winds above the sea, making a slow, zigzag path in the sky. Instead of flying in the direction they want to go, they fly left and right, swooping up and down. The zigzag takes them in one direction, but they seem to be taking their time -- actually, an albatross is just letting the wind do all the work!