Abstract

The relationships between behaviour and synoptic-scale weather patterns and wind speeds for wandering (Diomedea exulans), black-browed (D. melanophrys) and light-mantled sooty (Phoebetria palpebrata) albatrosses were examined using observations collected from ships in the Southern Ocean south of Tasmania, Australia. Wandering albatrosses were found in high-pressure systems in significantly higher numbers than expected than in low-pressure systems. Wandering albatrosses were also found more frequently at lower latitudes than were black-browed and light-mantled sooty albatrosses. Light-mantled sooty and black-browed albatrosses showed no significant association with high- or low-pressure systems, suggesting that they can use either pressure system for travel. High-pressure systems may act as "traps" for wandering albatrosses, due to the lower wind speeds generally associated with these systems.

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