birding-aus

Worlds oldest bird,

To: "EDDIE CHAPMAN" <>, "Messages Birding-aus" <>
Subject: Worlds oldest bird,
From: "Bob Forsyth" <>
Date: Tue, 29 Apr 2003 18:09:00 +1000
g'day Eddie
Google http://www.google.com.au/ threw up these answers (with others) on
 
Grandma (Royal Albatross) from Taiaroa Head was 62+ years old when last seen - and banded in 1937, but as an adult.
This information from Rod Cossee and confirmed by CJR Robertson.
 
Manx shearwater -- a far-flying gull-like seabird -- was probably born in 1952 and is thought to have clocked up about five million miles in the air.

First ringed by ornithologists in 1957, the bird's journeys were made while migrating between Britain and South America.

It was re-discovered on April 4 this year in a colony of several thousand others on Bardsey, an island off the Lleyn peninsula in north Wales.

The shearwater had just returned from its South American wintering grounds and was preparing to breed when it was netted, as part of the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) national bird-ringing scheme.

Graham Appleton, the BTO's fund-raising manager, told CNN it was the fourth time the bird had been netted and released -- the other occasions being May 22, 1957, July 8, 1961 and April 16, 1977.

Appleton told CNN: "Not only is this bird considerably older than you would expect, it is still breeding.

"As long as they are still going, they produce young. Birds don't really have old age!"

He said the estimated huge mileage it has covered is down to it living much of its life on the wing -- shearwaters are extremely economical fliers, gliding on wind currents rather than flapping continuously.

"It comes to land only during the breeding season, when it seeks out an island where it can dig a burrow," he said.

"It will stay at the colony until the end of the summer and will then head out back to sea where it travels around southern Atlantic, until next spring."

He said that given its known age and its winter migration cycle which takes in Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, it is estimated that the bird has travelled 500,000 miles, or the equivalent of a return trip to the Moon.

Taking feeding flights into account, it has probably covered a total of five million miles.

British bird expert Chris Mead told Reuters: "The only way you can tell a bird's age is by ringing it, and we know about all the other birds, so we can say it is the oldest.

"It would not be uncommon to find birds aged between 15 or 20 years in a colony of shearwaters, but 50 years is absolutely remarkable," he said.

Manx shearwaters, whose scientific name is Puffinus puffinus, are shy of the mainland where danger lurks in the form of predators like stoats, rats and birds of prey, the RSPB said.

The Manx shearwater has a black back and wings with a white belly and at about 14 inches long it is slightly larger than a pigeon.

The oldest wild bird ever found was a royal albatross that nested in New Zealand and was named Grandma, the Times said. The bird was at least 53 years old when it went missing.

The previous oldest known wild bird in Britain was also a Manx shearwater, recorded in 1996 in Northern Ireland aged 41.

According to the Guinness Book of Animal Records, the highest ever reported age of a bird is an unconfirmed 82 years for a male Siberian white crane called Wolf which died at the International Crane Centre in Wisconsin, U.S., in 1988.

Experts are convinced that there are more venerable individuals still to be identified. Some, particularly in the parrot family, are thought to have hatched at the end of the 19th century

Regards
Bob Forsyth, Mount Isa, NW Qld.
 
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