Coleridge immortalised the Albatross and turned it into a metaphor for man's profligate management
of the natural environment. The Tasmanian Shy Albatross is one of more than 20 species spread across
4 genera (Thalassarche, Phoebetria, Diomedea and Phoebastria), but is the only one endemic to Tasmania.
The Tasmanian Shy Albatross nests colonially only on three small islands off the coast of Tasmania:
Albatross Island (5,000 pairs), Mewstone (7,500 pairs) and Pedra Branca (250 pairs). They mate for
life and lay one egg each year. The adults are essentially sedentary around their breeding sites
and Tasmania, whilst the juvenile birds in each year set off on a 3 year peregrination immediately
after fledging.
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