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  2. Shearwater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearwater

    They nest in burrows and often give eerie contact calls on their night-time visits. They lay a single white egg. They lay a single white egg. The chicks of some species, notably short-tailed and sooty shearwaters, are subject to harvesting from their nest burrows for food, a practice known as muttonbirding , in Australia and New Zealand.

  3. Seabird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabird

    Seabird mortality caused by long-line fisheries can be greatly reduced by techniques such as setting long-line bait at night, dying the bait blue, setting the bait underwater, increasing the amount of weight on lines and by using bird scarers, [104] and their deployment is increasingly required by many national fishing fleets.

  4. Short-tailed shearwater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-tailed_shearwater

    Adult near Burrow on Bruny Island. The photograph was taken at night. Fledgling, Austins Ferry, Tasmania, Australia. The short-tailed shearwater or slender-billed shearwater (Ardenna tenuirostris; formerly Puffinus tenuirostris), also called yolla or moonbird, and commonly known as the muttonbird in Australia, is the most abundant seabird species in Australian waters, and is one of the few ...

  5. Bird migration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_migration

    Seabirds fly low over water but gain altitude when crossing land, and the reverse pattern is seen in land birds. [ 34 ] [ 35 ] However most bird migration is in the range of 150 to 600 m (490–2,000 ft).

  6. Flora and fauna of the Outer Hebrides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flora_and_fauna_of_the...

    An important feature of the winter bird life is the great diversity of wildfowl. A variety of duck, such as common eider and long-tailed duck are found in the shallow water around Lewis. [1] Great Bernera hosts numerous seabird species, including gulls, waders and ducks such as goldeneye. More unusually, a jack snipe was observed on the island ...

  7. Procellariiformes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procellariiformes

    The majority of procellariiforms nest once a year and do so seasonally. [69] Some tropical shearwaters, like the Christmas shearwater, are able to nest on cycles slightly shorter than a year, and the large great albatrosses (genus Diomedea) nest in alternate years (if successful). Most temperate and polar species nest over the spring-summer ...

  8. Atlantic puffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_puffin

    Spending the autumn and winter in the open ocean of the cold northern seas, the Atlantic puffin returns to coastal areas at the start of the breeding season in late spring. It nests in clifftop colonies, digging a burrow in which a single white egg is laid. Chicks mostly feed on whole fish and grow rapidly.

  9. Procellariidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procellariidae

    The family Procellariidae is a group of seabirds that comprises the fulmarine petrels, the gadfly petrels, the diving petrels, the prions, and the shearwaters.This family is part of the bird order Procellariiformes (or tubenoses), which also includes the albatrosses and the storm petrels.