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Northern Gannet
jmorlan

Northern Gannet (Morus bassanus)

The spotted underwing coverts and dark secondaries indicate immaturity. These heavy but stunningly graceful seabirds took advantage of updrafts created by our cruise ship. They would often hang overhead above the rear deck, or quarter back and forth, rarely plunging for food. They take 4-5 years before acquiring full adult plumage. Plumage stages between Juvenile and Adult are poorly understood. We know that they gradually (34 yr) develop all-white body plumage but Gannets of the same age show much variation because of individual differences in the progress of molt. Adults are known to have an alternate (breeding) plumage, but a pre-alternate molt has not yet been described for immature birds such as this.

This species has been increasing on both sides of the Atlantic and recently expanded northward into the Barents Sea, possibly as a consequence of warming ocean temperatures. The 2016 population in Norway was estimated at 6,900 breeding pairs in 7 colonies. However this is minuscule (2%) compared to the 340,000 occupied sites in 21 colonies in the British Isles.
Location
Norwegian Sea, Off Nordland, Norway
Date taken
19 July 2018
Scientific name
Morus bassanus
Equipment used
Canon PowerShot SX50 HS
Staff member
Opus Editor
Supporter
Very nicely captured Joe.

It must have been a great experience to have them cruising so closely over the ship.
 

Media information

Category
Britain & Europe
Added by
jmorlan
Date added
View count
26
Comment count
3

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